Surgery (Such as Limb Amputations or Hernia Repair)
Excessive Pressure (Tight Shoes or High Heels)
Repetitive Stress/Irritation
Most Common in Women
Presentation
Burning Pain
Numbness & Paresthesias
Dysesthesia – Abnormal Sensation
Allodynia – Pain from Stimuli that Normally Should Not Be Painful (Slight Pressure, Brush of Fabric, etc.)
Hyperalgesia – Excessive Pain from Stimuli that Do Normally Cause Pain (Bumping, etc.)
Clicking Sensation with Walking
Morton Neuroma – Neuroma Between the Third-Fourth Toes
“Walking on a Marble”
Diagnosis
Clinical (Based on History and Physical Exam)
May Consider US or MRI
Treatment
Initial Therapy: Medical Management
Medication (Tricyclic Antidepressants, Gabapentin or Steroid Injections)
Physical Therapy
Rest & Ice
Shoes that Avoid Pressure on the Neuroma
If Medical Therapy Fails: Surgery (Decompression or Excision)
Neuroma of Second Intermetatarsal Space 1
Morton Neuroma 2
Morton Neuroma on MRI 3
References
Matsumoto T, Chang SH, Izawa N, Ohshiro Y, Tanaka S. Interdigital Neuroma in the Second Intermetatarsal Space Associated with Metatarsophalangeal Joint Instability. Case Rep Orthop. 2016;2016:9575917. (License: CC BY-4.0)
Davis F. Therapeutic Massage Provides Pain Relief to a Client with Morton’s Neuroma: A Case Report. Int J Ther Massage Bodywork. 2012;5(2):12-9. Epub 2012 Jun 30. (License: CC BY-NC-ND-3.0)
Climent JM, Mondéjar-Gómez F, Rodríguez-Ruiz C, Díaz-Llopis I, Gómez-Gallego D, Martín-Medina P. Treatment of Morton neuroma with botulinum toxin A: a pilot study. Clin Drug Investig. 2013 Jul;33(7):497-503. (License: CC BY-NC-3.0)