- Artritis Reumatoide en el Pie y Tobillo
- Biopsia de Tejida Blando
- Buniones (Juanete)
- Coalición Tarsal
- Complicaciones Diabéticas y Prevención de Amputaciones
- Curación de Los Huesos
- Dedo Cruzado
- Dedo en Martillo
- Deformidad de Haglund
- Diabeticas: Estatisticas Alarmantes
- Disfunción de Tendón Tibial Posterior
- Dolor de Talón
- Dolor de Talón Infantil
- Ejercicios de Elongación
- El Dolor Crónico de Tobillo Lateral
- Enfermedad Vascular Periferica (PAD)
- Equinismo
- Esguince de Tobillo
- Fibroma Plantar
- Fractura de Estrés
- Fracturas de Los Dedos Del Pie
- Fracturas de Tobillo
- Fracturas del Calcáneo (Fracturas del Hueso del Talón)
- Fracturas del Quinto Metatarsiano
- Gota
- Hallux Rigidus
- Heridas Por Punción
- Inestabilidad Crónica de Tobillo
- Inicio de Drenaje Siguiendo Los Pasos de Absceso Infectado
- Inflamación Aguda
- Instrucciones par el Cuidado de Heridas
- Instrucciones Para Muletas
- Juanetes de Sastre
- Lesión del Domo Talar
- Lesiones de Lisfranc
- Lesiones del Tendón Peroneo
- Lesiones en un Hueso Sesamoideo del Pie
- Melanoma Maligno del Pie
- Necesito un Examen Para PAD?
- Neuroma de Morton
- Neuropatía Diabética Periférica
- Osteoartritis del Pie y el Tobillo
- Pie Cavo (Pie de Arco Alto)
- Pie de Atleta
- Pie de Charcot
- Pie Diabético
- Pie Plano Flexible
- Pie Plano Pediátrico
- Que Usted Espera con el Tratamiento de Acido par Alas Verrugas
- Que Usted Espera Por Las Inyecciones de Esteriodes
- Quiste de Ganglio
- Ruptura del Tendón de Aquiles
- Síndrome del Hueso Trigono
- Síndrome del Navicular Accesorio
- Síndrome del Túnel Tarsiano
- Tendinitis de Aquiles
- Terapia con Onda de Choque Extracorporea (ESWT)
- Trastornos Comunes del Tendón de Aquiles
- Trombosis Venosa Profunda
- Uña Encarnada del Dedo del Pie
- Uña Infectada Por Hongos
- Verruga Plantar (Verruca Plantaris)
Tarsal Coalition
Click the book below to Order Your Complimentary Copy
of "Foot Health 101: Healthy Feet are Happy Feet." 
“I wrote this book because too many people suffer
from foot and ankle pain unnecessarily.”
-Dr. Matthew Neuhaus
Tarsal coalition is a bone condition that causes decreased motion or absence of motion in one or more of the joints in the foot. The bones found at the top of the arch, the heel, and the ankle are referred to as the tarsal bones. A tarsal coalition is an abnormal connection between two of the tarsal bones in the back of the foot or the arch. This abnormal connection between two bones is most commonly an inherited trait.
The lack of motion or absence of motion experienced in a tarsal coalition is caused by abnormal bone, cartilage, or fibrous tissue growth across a joint. When excess bone has grown across a joint, it may result in restricted or a complete lack of motion in that joint. Cartilage or fibrous tissue growth can restrict motion of the affected joint to varying degrees, causing pain in the affected joint and/or in surrounding joints.
Symptoms usually include an aching sensation deep in the foot near the ankle or arch, accompanied by muscle spasms on the outside of the affected leg. Nonsurgical treatments, such as corrective shoes or custom orthotics, physical therapy, and anti-inflammatory medication, are the first courses of action. Note: Please consult your physician before taking any medications. Surgery is sometimes performed in severe cases to allow for more normal motion between the bones or to fuse the affected joint or surrounding joints.











