"According to the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society, people
take an average of 10,000 steps a day. High heels shift the force of
each of those steps so that the most
pressure ends up on the ball of the foot and on the bones at the base of
the toes. (If you wear flats, the entire foot would absorb this
impact.) A 3-inch heel -- most experts consider a heel "high" at 2
inches or more -- creates three to six times more stress on the front of
the foot than a shoe with a modest one-inch heel.
As a result,
heels can lead to bunions, heel pain, toe deformities, shortened
Achilles tendons, and trapped nerves. In fact, women account for about
90% of the nearly 800,000 operations each year for bunions, hammertoes
(a permanent deformity of the toe joint in which the toe bends up
slightly and then curls downward, resting on its tip), and trapped
nerves, and most of these surgeries can be linked back to their
high-heeled shoe choice.
The problems can travel upward, too.
The ankle, knee, and hip joints can all suffer from your footwear
preferences. When you walk in flats, the muscles of the leg and thigh
have an opportunity to contract as well as to stretch out. However, when
wearing your high-heeled shoes, the foot is held in a downward position
as you walk. This keeps the knee, hip, and low back in a somewhat
flexed position, which prevents the muscles that cross the backside of
these joints to stretch out as they normally would. Over time, this can
lead to stiffness, pain, and injury. High heels can also cause lower
back strain, because the heel causes your body to pitch forward more
than normal, putting excess pressure on the back."
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