The good news: loading-based rehab has 25 years of replicated trials behind it, and the protocol is a step, a backpack, and twelve weeks. The catch: "heavy" actually means heavy, the work hurts a little while you're doing it, and you have to stay with it past the point when nothing's obviously changing yet. Done right, the morning-step pain quiets down within a month, and most people are back to running by the third.
Two pieces of tissue, doing similar jobs, failing in similar ways. The plantar fascia is a thick band running from the heel bone forward to the toes — the leaf-spring under the arch that snaps back every step. The Achilles tendon is the cable from the calf down to the heel bone — the lever that lifts you off the ground at every push-off. Both take the full weight of the body, thousands of times a day, and both are designed for it.
What goes wrong isn't inflammation. The old names — plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendinitis — imply a fire to put out with ice, rest, and an anti-inflammatory. Take a biopsy of either tissue when it's been hurting for months and you don't find inflammatory cells. You find collagen that's lost its weave, ground substance that's accumulated, and new blood vessels and nerves growing in where they don't belong Lemont et al. 2003 Maffulli et al. 2003. The tissue isn't inflamed. It's degenerated — the wear isn't healing because the load to repair it isn't being applied.
That's why the first steps in the morning are the worst. Overnight, the tissue stiffens; the first loading cycle stresses the most damaged region before the rest of the foot has warmed up and recruited. Once you've walked around for ten minutes, the surrounding tissue takes some share of the load and the pain backs off. The pattern — sharp at first, easing through the day, returning after a long stand or run — is the diagnosis, more reliably than any imaging study Martin et al. 2014.
Why it happens: load that outran the tissue's ability to adapt. A jump in running mileage. A new pair of zero-drop shoes. A job that put you on concrete for eight hours. Bodyweight matters — a BMI over 30 raises plantar fasciitis risk roughly five-fold Riddle et al. 2003. Age matters — both conditions peak in the 40s and 50s, when tendon adaptation slows. What barely matters: the foot shape that gets blamed in shoe shops. A large prospective study of new runners found no association between foot pronation and injury risk over a year Nielsen et al. 2014.
What actually works
The treatment that beats every alternative in the trial record is also the one most people don't want to hear: load the painful tissue, heavy and slow, three times a week, for twelve weeks minimum. This is eccentric training — loading the tissue as it lengthens under your weight — and the literature on it is unusually consistent for a musculoskeletal condition.
A 2015 Danish trial tightened it up. Instead of twice a day for seven days a week, three times a week of slower, heavier raises — working up to your heaviest comfortable six-rep load — produced the same outcomes by week twelve, with patients reporting much higher satisfaction (78% completely satisfied versus 38% on the original schedule) Beyer et al. 2015. The simpler reading: three quality sessions a week beats fourteen rushed ones.
The same principle works for plantar fasciitis. A 2015 trial put one group on the standard stretch — pulling the toes back to load the fascia — and another on heavy single-leg heel-raises with a towel under the toes. At three months, the loaded group was 29 points ahead on the standard foot-function questionnaire, a large effect. By twelve months both groups had landed in roughly the same place, but the loading group got there faster Rathleff et al. 2015. Stretching helps; loading helps more.
What sits underneath this is the natural history. About 80–90% of plantar fasciitis cases resolve within a year regardless of what you do Crawford & Thomson 2003. Achilles tendinopathy is similar though slower. So the question isn't whether it'll resolve; it's whether you spend twelve weeks or eighteen months getting there, and whether the tissue that comes out the other side is stronger than it went in.
What keeps happening if you don't fix it
The first thing that changes isn't the foot. It's how much you're walking. The dog gets shorter walks because the first kilometre still hurts. The Saturday hike becomes a Saturday at home. You park closer. The runs you used to do don't fit in the schedule any more because the recovery from each one is a week of limping. Six months in, you've added a few kilos you didn't expect, your sleep is worse because you're moving less, and the foot still hurts.
The people around you notice before you do. Your partner says you're walking funny. A colleague says you should really see someone. Your mother asks if you're limping. By the second year — if you've fed the cortisone-shot cycle, three or four shots, each one buying a few good weeks — your Achilles is structurally weaker than it was, and the small but real rupture risk after repeated injections starts to matter, especially through your forties and fifties Coombes et al. 2010.
The cost isn't really the foot. It's the year of walking, hiking, running, and casual life you were supposed to spend doing those things, traded for a problem that the loading protocol resolves in three months.
The rehab itself
The same exercise for both conditions, with a small twist depending on which one you have. The principle is identical: load the tissue heavy, load it slow, do it three times a week, and keep going for twelve weeks.
Inside that pain window, you can keep doing most of what you normally do. Running through Achilles tendinopathy at reduced volume — half your usual mileage, no sprints or hills — doesn't worsen the outcome compared with full rest, and produces equivalent recovery at twelve months Silbernagel et al. 2007. Plantar fasciitis is similar; you may need a two- to four-week pause from running in the worst cases, then a gradual rebuild.
Two adjuncts pull their weight. For plantar fasciitis, the toe-extension stretch — pull the toes firmly back, hold ten seconds, ten times, three times a day, including before stepping out of bed in the morning — outperforms the more familiar calf stretch DiGiovanni et al. 2003. For Achilles, an isometric calf hold (five forty-five-second holds at about 70% effort) gives several hours of pain relief afterward and is useful before a walk or event you can't avoid Rio et al. 2015.
For insertional Achilles pain — right where the tendon meets the heel bone — full-range heel drops below the step often aggravate. Modify: do the heel-raises from neutral, not below, and add a small heel lift in your shoe to take some of the stretch off the insertion Jonsson et al. 2008.
When this isn't the protocol
The loading rehab is safe for almost everyone with these conditions. A few patterns demand a different first move.
What to unlearn
Most of the conventional advice for these conditions is either wrong or quietly delays recovery.
"Rest it until it stops hurting." This is the single most common reason a six-week problem becomes an eighteen-month one. Unloaded tissue doesn't strengthen — it stays weak, and the moment you go back to your usual activity the same overload reappears Silbernagel et al. 2007.
"Get a cortisone shot." The shot works — for four to six weeks. After that the picture darkens. Reviews of corticosteroid injections for tendinopathy show worse long-term outcomes and higher recurrence than no injection, and repeat injections raise rupture risk Coombes et al. 2010. Reserve it for a single date you can't miss, then go back to loading.
"The heel spur is the problem." About half of asymptomatic adults have heel spurs on X-ray; plenty of people with plantar fasciitis don't have one McMillan et al. 2009. The spur is a marker that the heel has been under traction for a long time, not the pain generator.
"I need custom orthotics." A randomised trial comparing prefabricated insoles, custom orthotics, and sham inserts found small short-term gains for all three and no meaningful long-term difference Landorf et al. 2006. A $30 insole is doing roughly the same work as a $500 custom one.
"I need the right shoe for my pronation." A prospective study of nearly 1,000 new runners found foot pronation didn't predict who got injured Nielsen et al. 2014. Pick a shoe that feels good, and don't switch suddenly to a radically different one.
"Stretching is the fix." Stretching helps modestly. Loading helps more, faster, and more durably Rathleff et al. 2015. Do the stretching as a side-helper; don't expect it to do the main work.
"I need an MRI." The diagnosis is clinical — the pattern of first-step pain, the location of tenderness, the history of a load change. Imaging confirms the thickening but doesn't change what you do, unless the clinical picture is unusual and a partial tear or stress fracture needs ruling out McMillan et al. 2009.
Footwear, time off, and what to spend money on
Shoes. A moderately cushioned shoe with a 6–12 mm drop from heel to toe takes some tension off the Achilles. A stiffer-soled shoe (less bend through the forefoot) reduces strain on the plantar fascia. Sudden moves to zero-drop or minimalist shoes — popular over the last decade — are a known trigger for both conditions in unprepared feet. Comfort, in trial data, predicts injury risk better than any algorithmic gait-shop fit.
Insoles and heel lifts. A $30 prefabricated insole helps as much as a custom one. For Achilles pain — especially the kind right at the heel-bone insertion — a 1–1.5 cm heel lift in both shoes during the first month of rehab takes some of the stretch off the tendon while you build it back up.
Night splints. A boot that holds the ankle in dorsiflexion overnight prevents the morning stiffness. Modest benefit, uncomfortable for most people, often abandoned. Worth trying if the morning-step pain hasn't softened after a month of the toe-stretch protocol.
Time off running. For most cases you don't have to stop running entirely — cut volume by a third to a half, drop hills and sprints, and load the calf at the gym three times a week alongside Silbernagel et al. 2007. Return to full volume is governed by the morning-step pain: when first-step pain has been under 2 out of 10 for two weeks, add about 10% of weekly volume per week.
Money. The whole protocol costs you a step (you have one), a backpack (you have one), and a $30–60 insole if you want one. Collagen peptides with a dose of vitamin C, taken about an hour before loading sessions, are another cheap, low-risk thing to try for the tendon side — the evidence is suggestive rather than settled. Add 6–10 physiotherapy visits at $80–150 each if you want supervised progression — useful but not strictly necessary if you can follow a programme. Shockwave (a few hundred dollars), platelet-rich plasma injections (over a thousand), and surgery (five figures) are reserved for the small minority who don't respond after six months of compliant loading.
Why people stay stuck
Most failures aren't failures of the protocol — they're failures of persistence.
- Stopping at week six. Pain often eases by week four; the tissue is still catching up. Stopping then sets up a recurrence within months Alfredson et al. 1998.
- Loading too light. Three sets of fifteen bodyweight calf-raises is a maintenance dose, not a treatment dose. By week four to six, the working set should genuinely challenge you in the six-to-ten-rep range Beyer et al. 2015.
- Loading through unmanaged pain. If session pain hits 8 out of 10 and is still there the next morning, the load is breaking the tissue down faster than it's rebuilding. Cut back.
- Protocol-jumping. Switching from loading to stretching to massage to dry needling every three weeks because the pain didn't drop fast enough. Pain doesn't move in a straight line — give a protocol at least eight weeks before judging it.
- The cortisone loop. Shot, two good weeks, return to full activity, recurrence, second shot. By the third or fourth round the tissue is structurally compromised Coombes et al. 2010.
What changes when it works
Week three or four, the first thing you notice is that the steps out of bed don't make you wince. They're a little stiff, then they're normal. By week six or eight you can stand through a long meeting or a dinner out without thinking about your foot. By week eight to twelve you're back to running — at reduced volume to start — and the foot tolerates it. By month four to six, full pre-injury training is realistic for most people; in the published trials, by twelve months, somewhere between 70% and 90% of patients are pain-free or close to it Beyer et al. 2015 Magnussen et al. 2009.
The changes you don't expect are the ones around the foot. The chronic background pain that you'd half-learned to live with quietens — and with it the steady drain on mood and energy that chronic pain reliably produces. Sleep improves once you're moving normally through the day again. The evening walk stops feeling like a chore. The irritability that crept in around month three of the limp lifts. People around you stop asking what's wrong.
The quieter second-order payoff at the tissue level: the calf and the foot that came out the other side of the protocol are stronger than they were before this happened. The loading programme isn't just rehab — it's a structured strength block for the lower leg. People who finish it tend to run more durably for years afterwards, with fewer recurrences than they had with their pre-injury training.
Adjacent things worth a look
This entry covers the two big foot-and-ankle overload conditions. Closely adjacent reading: the broader principle of tendon adaptation and loading rehab, which applies with only modest variations to patellar tendinopathy, gluteal tendinopathy, tennis elbow, and rotator cuff problems; how to manage a return to running after any lower-limb injury without re-injuring; calf and lower-leg strength as a longevity input in older adults; and how to introduce minimalist or low-drop footwear gradually without triggering one of these conditions.
- — If you train hard or have Achilles trouble, fluoroquinolones raise the rupture risk — flag it to the prescriber.
- — The real cure is heavy slow loading — eccentric work on the same tissue that hurts, three times a week.
- — Collagen peptides taken with vitamin C before your loading exercises may help the tendon side of the rehab.
- — Footwear changes the load on your arch and Achilles — a transition done too fast can flare both.
- — A tendinopathy sibling — different tendon, same heavy-slow-loading playbook and the same patience.
- — Knee, heel, and Achilles pain all follow the same rule: load it, don't rest it.
- — Heel and Achilles tendons follow the exact rule your elbow does: load it, don't rest it.
Substance + claimed effects
Plantar fasciitis and Achilles tendinopathy are the two dominant overload disorders of the foot and ankle. Plantar fasciitis is degenerative thickening and pain of the plantar fascia at its calcaneal origin, the band of connective tissue running from the heel to the toes; Achilles tendinopathy is degenerative thickening and pain of the Achilles tendon, either at the midportion (2–7 cm above the heel) or at its insertion on the calcaneus. Both are extremely common — plantar fasciitis affects an estimated 10% of adults over a lifetime Martin et al. 2014; Achilles tendinopathy has a lifetime incidence around 5–6% in the general population and far higher in runners Martin et al. 2018. Both share a clinical signature: sharp pain on the first steps after rest (worst out of bed in the morning), pain that eases with warm-up then returns after prolonged activity, and a tendency to drag on for months when handled the way most patients try to handle it — with rest, stretching, and a cortisone shot. The intended scope of this entry is the substance (these two disorders, treated together because their mechanism, rehabilitation principles, and reader-facing decisions overlap heavily) and every consequence that follows: how to recognise each, how loading-based rehabilitation works and why it's the consensus first-line treatment, what footwear and orthotics actually do, how to keep walking and running while the tissue remodels, and how long the timeline really is. The article addresses both the felt experience (the morning-step pain, the limping start, the slow climb back to running) and the practical decisions (which exercise, how heavy, when to see someone, when not to inject).
Evidence by addressing question
Mechanism
The classical name — fasciitis, tendinitis — is wrong. Histological studies of biopsied plantar fascia from chronic cases show no acute inflammatory cells; what they show is collagen degeneration, mucoid ground-substance accumulation, neovascularisation, and chondroid metaplasia Lemont et al. 2003. The same picture appears in the chronic Achilles tendon: disorganised collagen, increased ground substance, neovessels and accompanying nociceptive nerve ingrowth, with conspicuously few inflammatory mediators Maffulli et al. 2003. The correct names are fasciopathy and tendinopathy — the suffix matters because it predicts what treatment will and won't work.
The dominant mechanism is mechanical: the tissue is repeatedly loaded at intensities that exceed its current adaptive capacity, and instead of remodelling stronger it accumulates micro-damage faster than it can repair. Cook and Purdam's continuum model frames this as a progression from reactive tendinopathy (short-term swelling response to a sudden load spike, reversible in days) through dysrepair (matrix breakdown, partial reversibility) to degenerative (mature collagen disorganisation, neovascular ingrowth, reversibility limited but pain still modifiable) Cook & Purdam 2009. Plantar fascia follows a similar arc, though the fascia is denser and less cellular than tendon, so it remodels more slowly. The reason the morning steps hurt most is that the tissue stiffens overnight; the first loading cycle stresses the densest, most damaged region before the surrounding tissue has warmed and recruited; once microvascular flow rises and the unaffected collagen takes some share of load, the pain falls.
Risk factors converge on three categories. Mechanical loading volume: a sudden increase in running mileage, occupational standing on hard floors (matched case-control adjusted OR 3.6 for standing >6 h/day in plantar fasciitis) Riddle et al. 2003, or a new sport demanding heel rises. Tissue tolerance: elevated BMI (adjusted OR 5.6 for BMI >30 in non-athletes) Riddle et al. 2003, decreased ankle dorsiflexion range, and age (peak incidence 40–60 for both conditions). And extrinsic factors — fluoroquinolone antibiotics (a known tendinopathy/rupture risk), recent corticosteroid exposure, and prior lower-limb injury for the Achilles van der Vlist et al. 2019. What does not robustly predict either condition: foot pronation in a neutral shoe (a 1-year prospective cohort of 927 novice runners found no association between pronation and injury risk) Nielsen et al. 2014.
Evidence
The strongest, most replicated evidence in this entry is for progressive loading as the primary treatment of both conditions.
For midportion Achilles tendinopathy, the founding study is Alfredson et al. 1998. Fifteen recreational athletes with chronic midportion Achilles tendinosis (mean 18 months of symptoms, all on a surgical waiting list) performed heavy-load eccentric heel drops — 3×15 with knee straight and 3×15 with knee bent, twice daily, 7 days a week, for 12 weeks; load was added by backpack once bodyweight became painless. All 15 returned to running at pre-injury level; mean pain on activity fell from 81/100 to 4.8/100 at 12 weeks; surgery was cancelled Alfredson et al. 1998. The protocol has been replicated dozens of times, including a head-to-head against concentric calf training showing eccentric superiority for pain reduction at 12 weeks Mafi et al. 2001, and a controlled trial in non-athletic patients showing similar gains Roos et al. 2004. Systematic reviews put response rates at 60–90% for midportion disease Magnussen et al. 2009.
The Alfredson protocol's twice-daily, 7-day schedule (180 reps/day) is more than the tissue strictly needs. Beyer et al. 2015 compared heavy slow resistance — 3 sessions/week of slow (6 sec/rep), heavy (working up to 6RM) bilateral calf-raises through full range — against the Alfredson protocol in a 12-week RCT (n=58); outcomes were equivalent on the VISA-A score at 12 weeks and at 52 weeks, with substantially higher patient satisfaction in the heavy-slow group (78% vs 38% "completely satisfied" at 12 weeks) Beyer et al. 2015. The clinical reading: less frequent, heavier loading does the same work, and adherence is what often separates a 12-week outcome from a 12-month one. Heavy slow resistance was first shown in patellar tendinopathy and has since been extended to Achilles, plantar fascia, and gluteal tendons Kongsgaard et al. 2009.
For plantar fasciitis, Rathleff et al. 2015 randomised 48 patients with ultrasound-confirmed disease to either plantar fascia-specific stretching (DiGiovanni protocol) or high-load strength training: single-leg heel-raises on a step with a towel under the toes (windlassing the fascia), 3×12 reps every other day, slow tempo (3 sec up, 2 sec hold at top, 3 sec down), loaded with a backpack once bodyweight became easy. The high-load group had a 29-point greater improvement on the Foot Function Index at 3 months (large effect, p<0.05); by 12 months both groups had converged, but the loading group reached the same endpoint faster Rathleff et al. 2015. Plantar fascia-specific stretching (pulling the toes back to tension the fascia, holding 10 sec, 10 reps, 3×/day) outperforms standard Achilles stretching in two trials with 2-year follow-up DiGiovanni et al. 2003 DiGiovanni et al. 2006. Both are reasonable; the loading protocol arrives at the same place faster and likely produces more durable adaptation.
Eighty to ninety percent of plantar fasciitis cases resolve within 12 months of conservative care regardless of which specific protocol is used Crawford & Thomson 2003 Martin et al. 2014. The same broad time course applies to Achilles tendinopathy though somewhat longer in chronic and insertional disease. The implication: time and load do most of the work; the protocol's job is to accelerate and direct that recovery.
Protocol
The consensus algorithm, distilled from the APTA clinical practice guidelines for plantar fasciitis Martin et al. 2014 and midportion Achilles tendinopathy Martin et al. 2018 and the Dutch multidisciplinary Achilles guideline de Vos et al. 2021:
- Load-reduce, don't load-eliminate. Continued activity within tolerable pain (the ≤5/10 pain-monitoring rule) does not worsen Achilles outcomes and produces equivalent recovery to full rest at 12 months Silbernagel et al. 2007. Plantar fasciitis behaves similarly.
- Progressive loading exercise as primary treatment. Heavy slow resistance, 3×/week, 12 weeks minimum for either condition. Achilles: heel-raises (straight-knee and bent-knee variants), starting bodyweight, adding load progressively. Plantar: single-leg heel-raise on a step with toes extended over the edge to engage the fascia Rathleff et al. 2015.
- Pain-monitoring rule. During and immediately after a loading session, pain may rise to 5/10; it must subside to baseline by the next morning. If morning pain on first steps gets worse week-on-week, the load is too high; reduce it Silbernagel et al. 2007 Silbernagel et al. 2020.
- Plantar fascia-specific stretching (toe extension, hold 10 sec, 10 reps, 3×/day, including before getting out of bed) for plantar fasciitis DiGiovanni et al. 2003. Calf stretching for Achilles is permitted but not load-bearing on its own.
- Footwear adjustments and short-term insoles when symptoms are severe (see Practicalities).
- Shockwave therapy as second-line if loading alone is insufficient by 12 weeks; mixed evidence but positive trials in plantar fasciitis Rompe et al. 2010 and Achilles Rasmussen et al. 2008, with additive benefit when combined with eccentric loading Rompe et al. 2008.
For insertional Achilles tendinopathy specifically, full-dorsiflexion eccentric drops (the Alfredson position over a step) often aggravate; a modified protocol that limits ankle dorsiflexion to the floor — eccentric heel-raises from neutral, not below neutral — produced better outcomes in a pilot cohort with insertional disease Jonsson et al. 2008. Heel lifts to reduce dorsiflexion at the insertion are reasonable in parallel.
Isometric calf holds (5×45 sec, 70% MVC) have a documented short-term analgesic effect — pain relief lasting hours after a single session — first shown in patellar tendinopathy Rio et al. 2015. Useful as a pre-activity tool when a competing event or an essential walk can't be avoided; not a substitute for the loading program.
Contraindications
The conservative loading protocol is safe across most demographics. Exceptions and modifications:
- Recent corticosteroid injection to plantar fascia or Achilles — do not load heavily for 4–6 weeks; tissue tolerance is transiently reduced and rupture rates rise with multiple injections Coombes et al. 2010.
- Acute partial or full tendon tear — surgical or boot-immobilisation territory, not loading. A sudden "snap" or palpable gap demands imaging and a foot-and-ankle surgeon.
- Fluoroquinolone use (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) within the prior 6 months — load conservatively; risk of rupture is elevated.
- Inflammatory arthropathy (psoriatic, reactive, ankylosing spondylitis-associated enthesitis) — this looks like plantar fasciitis or insertional Achilles tendinopathy but the driver is systemic inflammation. Look for bilateral symptoms, morning stiffness lasting hours, accompanying joint pain elsewhere. Refers to rheumatology.
- Diabetes mellitus, particularly with peripheral neuropathy — tendon and fascia healing is slower and pain reporting may underestimate damage. Progress load more cautiously.
- Pregnancy — the loading program itself is safe, but ligamentous laxity and weight gain change the loading environment; expect slower progress and adjust expectations rather than the protocol.
Misconceptions
- "It's inflammation." No. Histology shows degenerative change without inflammatory cells in both conditions Lemont et al. 2003 Maffulli et al. 2003. NSAIDs help the discomfort short-term but do not address the disorder and may impair tendon adaptation.
- "The heel spur is causing the pain." Heel spurs are present in ~50% of asymptomatic adults and absent in many with plantar fasciitis; their correlation with pain is weak McMillan et al. 2009. The spur is a marker of long-standing traction, not the pain generator.
- "A cortisone shot will fix it." Short-term symptom relief (4–6 weeks) is real and well documented, but tendinopathy meta-analyses show worse long-term outcomes vs no injection or vs loading, with elevated recurrence and a small but non-trivial rupture risk after repeat injections Coombes et al. 2010. Reserve for a specific timeline-driven indication (a wedding, a single important event) and accept the trade.
- "Rest until it stops hurting, then return to running." This is how a 6-week problem becomes an 18-month problem. The tissue remodels in response to load; unloaded tissue does not strengthen, and the moment activity returns the same overload happens again Silbernagel et al. 2007.
- "Stretching is the treatment." Stretching helps plantar fasciitis modestly and is a reasonable adjunct DiGiovanni et al. 2003, but progressive loading produces faster and more durable recovery for both conditions Rathleff et al. 2015 Alfredson et al. 1998.
- "Imaging will tell me what's wrong." Ultrasound and MRI confirm thickening (plantar fascia >4 mm, Achilles >5–7 mm) but do not change management in uncomplicated cases. Imaging is for ruling out partial tears, calcific tendinosis, or systemic disease when the clinical picture is atypical McMillan et al. 2009.
- "The right shoe fixes pronation, which causes the injury." Pronation in a neutral shoe does not predict running injury in prospective data Nielsen et al. 2014. Shoe choice should follow comfort and habituation, not a gait-shop algorithm.
Practicalities
Footwear: a moderate-cushioned shoe with a 6–12 mm heel-to-toe drop relieves Achilles tension; a stiffer-soled shoe (low forefoot flexibility) reduces plantar fascia strain through the windlass mechanism. Sudden transitions to minimalist or zero-drop shoes are a recognised precipitant of both conditions for an unprepared runner. Comfort — the runner's subjective comfort filter — predicts injury risk as well or better than any prescriptive shoe-fit model.
Orthotics: prefabricated foot orthoses produce small short-term improvements in plantar fasciitis pain but offer no advantage over a sham insert at 12 months Landorf et al. 2006. Custom orthotics cost 5–10× more for the same effect size. Heel lifts (1–1.5 cm, both shoes) acutely offload the Achilles and are a reasonable bridge during the first 4–6 weeks of loading rehab, especially for insertional disease.
Night splints: keep the ankle in dorsiflexion overnight to prevent the morning stiffness peak. Modest benefit in plantar fasciitis, uncomfortable for most, often abandoned. Reasonable for severe morning-step pain that doesn't respond to the toe-stretch protocol within 4–6 weeks.
Cost: a $30–$60 prefabricated insole, a $0 home loading program (a step and a backpack), $80–$150 per physical therapy visit if professional supervision is wanted (6–10 visits over 12 weeks is typical). Shockwave: $100–$300 per session, 3–5 sessions, often not insurance-covered. Cortisone: $50–$200 per injection. Tenotomy or fasciotomy surgery: $5,000–$15,000 and a recovery longer than the conservative protocol — reserved for refractory cases past 6–12 months of compliant rehab.
Time-off-running: most runners with mild-to-moderate Achilles tendinopathy do not need to stop running entirely; reduce volume 30–50%, eliminate hills and sprints, and load the tendon at the gym 3×/week alongside Silbernagel et al. 2007. Plantar fasciitis is similar though early severe cases may need a 2–4 week running pause. Return-to-running is paced by morning-step pain: when first-step pain has been <2/10 for two weeks, add back 10% volume per week.
Failure modes
- Quitting the loading program at week 6. Tendon and fascia adaptation runs on a 10–14 week timeline; pain often improves by week 4, structure is still catching up. Stopping then sets up recurrence within months.
- Loading too light. "Heavy" means heavy — by week 4–6 the working set should be in the 6–10RM zone with backpack or dumbbells. Bodyweight calf-raises at 3×15 for 12 weeks are a maintenance dose, not a treatment dose Beyer et al. 2015.
- Loading through unmanaged pain spikes. The ≤5/10 rule with overnight return to baseline is the governor. Loading through 7/10 pain that persists 24 hours is producing damage, not adaptation.
- The cortisone-shot cycle. Initial relief, return to running too fast, recurrence, second shot, recurrence, tissue weaker each cycle, eventually rupture or chronic refractory disease Coombes et al. 2010.
- Switching protocols every 3 weeks. Pain doesn't move linearly; the natural arc is non-monotonic. Switching from loading to stretching to massage to needling because week 5 wasn't obviously better than week 3 prevents any one protocol from completing its arc.
- Ignoring the asymmetric case. Bilateral, persistent enthesitis (heel-bone tendon insertions inflamed) in a young man, with morning stiffness lasting an hour or more — this is not garden-variety overload tendinopathy. Spondyloarthropathy is the differential and the treatment is systemic, not local.
Stakes
Untreated or mistreated, both conditions slide from a 3–6 month inconvenience into chronic disease. Plantar fasciitis past 12 months is harder to resolve and predicts a guarded outcome Martin et al. 2014. Chronic Achilles tendinopathy alters gait, recruits compensations through knee and hip, and (with insertional disease and repeat cortisone) carries a non-trivial rupture risk in the 40–60 age band Coombes et al. 2010. Beyond the local tissue, the second-order cost is the activity loss: a six-month withdrawal from running or hiking knocks cardiovascular fitness, weight, sleep, and mood — the loss compounds before the foot has even resolved. The stakes are not about the foot; they're about the year of training, walking, hiking, and movement the foot was supposed to deliver.
Payoff
The realistic payoff timeline, from the literature and clinical experience: pain on first morning steps usually starts to fall by week 3–4 of consistent loading Alfredson et al. 1998 Rathleff et al. 2015. Daily activity (walking, standing at work) becomes comfortable by 6–8 weeks. Running can usually resume in some form by 8–12 weeks at reduced volume. Full pre-injury training load is realistic at 4–6 months for the chronic cases; 2–3 months for the recent-onset cases. Twelve-month outcomes in the loading trials show 70–90% of patients pain-free or near-pain-free Beyer et al. 2015 Magnussen et al. 2009. The non-trivial second-order payoff: a tendon and fascia that have been loaded through the protocol are stronger than they were before the injury — the rehab is essentially a structured strength program for the calf and foot. Many runners come out with a more durable lower leg than they had pre-injury, and that durability holds for years.
The credibility range
Optimist case
Progressive loading is one of the most replicated treatment effects in sports medicine. The Alfredson protocol has 25 years of replication across hundreds of studies and is endorsed by APTA, the Dutch multidisciplinary guideline, and most national orthopaedic and physiotherapy bodies Martin et al. 2018 de Vos et al. 2021. Rathleff's high-load plantar protocol replicates the same principle in plantar fascia with a clear superior arm vs the prior standard. The mechanism — mechanotransduction-mediated collagen remodelling under graded tension — is biologically coherent and matches what we know of tendon and fascia adaptation. The clinical results are large (effect sizes 0.8–1.5 on validated outcome measures), cheap, durable, and free of meaningful adverse events. For a condition that affects 10% of adults over a lifetime, this is about as well-evidenced and accessible a treatment as exists in musculoskeletal medicine.
Skeptic case
Most patients improve regardless of which protocol is used, on a similar 12-month timeline; loading may be accelerating recovery but the natural history is the dominant trend Crawford & Thomson 2003. The flagship Alfredson study was n=15, unblinded, on a select recreational-athlete population — the larger and better-controlled trials show smaller effect sizes Magnussen et al. 2009. Insertional disease responds less reliably than midportion. Adherence is the silent variable: drop-out rates in tendinopathy rehab trials run 20–40%, and the published "response rates" refer to compliers. The protocol's difficulty is under-discussed: heavy slow resistance, three times a week, for twelve weeks, while still walking around in pain — many patients cannot or will not do this. Orthotics, footwear changes, and pharmacological adjuncts get over-marketed because they are easy to sell; loading is the answer most patients don't want to hear.
Author's call
Progressive loading is the correct first-line treatment for both conditions, supported by strong replicated evidence and consensus guidelines. The honest framing for the reader: the treatment works, it takes 8–16 weeks of consistent effort, the protocol is undramatic, and most of the alternatives sold to you (custom orthotics, cortisone series, ultrasound therapy, stretching alone) are inferior or actively harmful long-term. Adherence is the rate-limiting variable, not the protocol. The article should lead with the loading rehab, frame the morning-step pain in plain terms, and be candid about the timeline.
Stakeholder + incentive map
- Orthotics industry — custom devices priced at $300–$800 with marginal evidence-base advantage over $30 prefabricated inserts Landorf et al. 2006. Commercial incentive to over-prescribe.
- Running shoe industry — the "stability" vs "neutral" gait-shop algorithm sits on weak evidence Nielsen et al. 2014. Commercial incentive aligned with prescribing motion-control shoes for pronators.
- Sports medicine physicians — cortisone is fast and visit-billable; conservative loading is slow and PT-billable. Incentive to inject in primary care settings; less so in academic sports medicine where guidelines are more rigorously applied.
- Physical therapists / sports physios — aligned with loading-based rehab; in-network pressure can push toward modality-heavy protocols (ultrasound, taping) that bill more per visit than supervised lifting.
- Foot-and-ankle surgeons — surgical rates for plantar fasciitis fell substantially as the loading evidence matured. Aligned with conservative care first; surgical revenue is from the <5% of refractory cases.
- Running and triathlon communities — loud, often well-informed signal on what protocols work; also notoriously prone to under-resting and over-running through pain. Their lived experience produced the "continue activity within pain tolerance" principle before the RCTs did Silbernagel et al. 2007.
Population variability
- Recreational runners (the most-studied population). Excellent response rates to loading protocols; high adherence; quick return to running.
- Non-athletic adults with high BMI / occupational standing. The largest plantar fasciitis subgroup. Loading still works but the loading environment (8 hours on concrete daily) keeps re-overloading the tissue; the rehab program must be paired with footwear and standing-mat changes, and outcomes are slower.
- Older adults (60+). Tendon adaptation slows with age; the protocol still works but the time-to-recovery extends 30–50%. Insertional Achilles disease is more common in this band.
- Insertional vs midportion Achilles. Insertional responds less reliably and tolerates less dorsiflexion. Modified protocols are needed Jonsson et al. 2008.
- Diabetes / metabolic syndrome. Connective tissue glycation slows healing; pain reporting may be blunted by neuropathy.
- Inflammatory arthropathies. The presentation looks identical; the mechanism and treatment are different. Critical not to miss.
- Female runners with low energy availability. Tendon collagen synthesis is suppressed in low-EA states; rehab outcomes are slower until energy intake is corrected.
Knowledge gaps
- Optimal loading dose — the field has settled on "heavy slow resistance, 3×/week, 12 weeks" but the minimum effective dose, the value of higher frequencies for adherent patients, and the role of isometrics as a standalone are not nailed down.
- Insertional Achilles tendinopathy — less-studied than midportion; the modified Jonsson protocol is a pilot. A definitive RCT for this subgroup is overdue.
- Imaging-to-symptom mapping — thickening and neovascularisation on ultrasound correlate weakly with symptoms; the field lacks an imaging biomarker that predicts response to loading.
- PRP, sclerosing injections, percutaneous tenotomy, high-volume injections — growing literature, inconsistent results; not first-line, considered when 6+ months of compliant loading hasn't resolved.
- Footwear-comfort × injury — comfort predicts injury risk but the mechanism is under-studied; the "preferred movement path" hypothesis lacks definitive trials.
Scope vs. brief. The brief named four consequence areas — presentations, loading-based rehab, footwear / orthotic adjustments, and effects on walking / running / return to activity. All four are covered end-to-end. The two conditions are treated as a single entry because their mechanism, rehabilitation principles, and reader-facing decisions overlap heavily; an editor wanting to split into a plantar-fasciitis-only and an Achilles-tendinopathy-only pair would lose the symmetry that makes the rehab story land in one place.
Treating both conditions in one entry. The strongest argument for a split is that insertional Achilles tendinopathy responds differently from midportion, and from plantar fasciitis; the strongest against is that 90% of the reader-facing protocol, the misconceptions, and the failure modes are shared. Kept together; the insertional variant is handled with a paragraph inside the protocol section rather than its own entry.
Cortisone framing. The article takes a clear position that corticosteroid injection is inferior to loading for medium- and long-term outcomes, and reserves it for a single date-driven indication. This is the consensus position in sports medicine and reflected in APTA and Dutch guidelines, but cortisone remains common in primary care and the framing may read as polemical to some clinicians. Held the position; the evidence carries it Coombes et al. 2010.
Rating difficulties. Several dimensions (energy, focus, sleep, mood) score 1–2 because they ride on chronic-pain resolution rather than a direct mechanism. Scored conservatively rather than dropping to zero, because chronic foot pain genuinely costs all four over months. Longevity scored 1 by the same logic — preserved ambulation matters but the effect is indirect and unmeasured.
Future-link candidates. Patellar tendinopathy, gluteal tendinopathy, tennis elbow, and rotator cuff tendinopathy as siblings under a broader "loading rehab" umbrella. A standalone entry on the "return to running after lower-limb injury" principle would unify a lot of forward pointers from MSK entries. An entry on minimalist / zero-drop footwear transitions would land naturally as a sibling.
Separate-entry candidates surfaced during write. Shockwave therapy as a modality has enough evidence across tendinopathies to merit its own entry rather than a paragraph here. PRP and platelet-rich plasma injections are an active area but probably under-evidenced for a standalone entry today; revisit in 2–3 years.
Citation note. One citation in the library (RoosEtAl2004b) was created by accidental ref naming and actually points to Wearing et al. 2006 (plantar fascia pathomechanics). Not used in this entry; flag for a future cleanup pass.
Plantar Fasciitis and Achilles Pain
The morning first-step pain gets quieter, then disappears. Walking, standing, and stairs come back to normal within a few months.
A cheap insole, a backpack for loading, and maybe a few physio visits. Most of the expensive options on offer aren't worth it.
Multiple replicated trials and clinical guidelines back loading-based rehab as the first-line treatment for both conditions.
Heavy heel-raises three times a week for three months, while you still hurt. The work itself is the cure.
Chronic pain quietly drains daily energy you didn't know you were spending. Treating it gives some of that back.
Months of limping out of bed quietly wears on you. Pain-free feet lift the mornings back up.
Feet that work keep you walking and active for decades. A small thing over a lifetime, but a real one.
Background pain pulls at attention. Less of it leaves a little more headspace for the rest of the day.
A sore Achilles or arch can poke at sleep position. Treating the cause helps more than fiddling with pillows.