Usuario:Organic Fungus Nuker Review
The most common location of a heel spur, and one that Organic Fungus Nuker is commonly associated with heel pain, is found under the heel bone. However, this spur is rarely ever the true source of heel pain. Attached to the heel bone at this location is a ligament called the plantar fascia. This tissue runs the length of the arch, and is essentially a firm rubbery band that helps support the overlying anatomic structures. In people with flat or flattening feet, gradual tension on this fascia creates inflammation and tissue damage. From this plantar fasciitis develops, which is essentially a chronic inflammatory disease of the tissue.
This inflammation and tissue damage is the true source of heel pain on the bottom of the foot. The spur is simply traction-caused calcification of the attaching fascia tissue where it meets the bone, essentially extending the length of the bottom of the heel bone. This spur runs parallel with the ground, and is not felt externally. Many people have heel spurs in this location and have no pain in the heel at all. Even those with very thin heel padding under the skin do not experience discomfort from these spurs. Like all things, there is an exception to pain in spurs on the bottom of the heel.
Certain classes of diseases, particularly immune-response arthritic conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and a group of diseases called seronegative arthropathies, can have heel spurs and pain as part of their symptoms. The spurs in these conditions is not the typical spur running out and parallel with the ground. In these conditions, the heel spurs are fluffy and face downward, into the pad of the heel. The general body inflammation found in these conditions increases the irritation these spurs create, which then leads to pain with weight bearing directly as a result of the spur presence.