Is this your symptom?
- Pain in a toe (or toes)
- Includes minor muscle strains from too much standing, walking or sports (overuse)
- If pain was caused by an injury, see Toe Injury care guide
Causes of Foot and Toe Pain
- Shoes that don't fit or don't offer good support can cause painful feet. Areas where shoes rub or pinch can cause corns and calluses. If blisters occur, they can become infected. Wear shoes that fit well and are right for the activity you are doing.
- Corns and Calluses are hard areas of skin caused by friction or pressure from shoes. The little toe is most at risk, but they can occur on any toe. The risk is higher if any toes are oddly shaped from injury or arthritis. Corns press into the skin and are often small, round and painful. Calluses often happen at the ball of the foot and heel. Padding can help with the pain. You may need to have custom shoe inserts or surgery to fix the problem causing the corn or callus.
- Ingrown Toenails are common and mainly affect the big toe. The edge of the nail presses into the skin at the side of the nail. At first, it may just cause discomfort. But if the nail breaks through the skin, it will cause a wound that can get infected. Treatment starts with protecting the skin from the edge of the nail. Sometimes part of the nail needs to be removed. Antibiotics may be needed. See Ingrown Toenail care guide.
- Trapped Nerves. The nerves in the lower leg can become trapped or squeezed where they pass through narrow spaces as they leave the spine. Sciatica is from pressure on a nerve in the back. It causes tingling, weakness or pain in the leg which may go right down to the toes. If symptoms do not go away with rest or treatment, surgery may be needed to release the nerve.
- Tendinitis is inflammation of tendons where they attach to the bone. It's caused by overuse. This causes tenderness in the area and pain when the foot or toes are moved or used. Often needs a long period of rest from the activity that caused it. A steroid shot may be needed to reduce the pain.
- Inflammation of Soft Tissues can happen in the feet. It often affects runners. It can also affect people who do not wear shoes with enough support.
- Joint Inflammation. Examples are rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, gout. Some, like gout, may affect just one joint (often the big toe). Others affect many joints at the same time. Early treatment may help prevent long-term damage to the joints involved.
- Bunions are swellings of the joints where the big toe joins the foot. The bone gets enlarged and the big toe turns outwards and points towards the other toes. The skin over the joint can become red and painful. Shoes may be hard to fit and walking is painful. Wearing shoes that are too tight could cause bunions or make them worse.
- Peripheral Neuropathy is damage to the nerves in the feet or legs (or hands). Feeling in the feet and toes can be affected. It can cause loss of feeling, tingling or stabbing/burning pain in some areas. The most common cause is diabetes. Wounds or injuries of the feet and toes may go unnoticed. This can lead to serious infection, if not treated.
- Fractures can occur during normal activity without a clear injury. Do not ignore ongoing foot pain.
- Blocked Artery. Arteries carry oxygen from your heart to the leg tissues. Symptoms of blockage are cold, pale, numb and/or painful leg or foot. The blockage will need to be cleared right away when this happens.
Pain Scale
- Mild: you feel some pain, but it does not keep you from any normal activities. Work, activities and sleep are not changed.
- Moderate: the pain keeps you from doing some normal activities. It may wake you up from sleep.
- Severe: the pain is very bad. It keeps you from doing all normal activities.
When to Call for Toe Pain
Go to ER Now
Call Doctor or Seek Care Now
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Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours
Contact Doctor During Office Hours
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Self Care at Home
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Go to ER Now
- Toes are cold and look very pale (could be painful or numb)
Call Doctor or Seek Care Now
- Severe pain
- Fever and swollen toe(s)
- Toes are red and warm to touch
- Bright red area on skin with lines tracking out from the area
- Toes look black or purple
- Loss of feeling lasts more than 1 hour
- You think you need to be seen, and the problem is urgent
Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours
- Ingrown nail with pain, redness, swelling or pus
- Looks infected (spreading redness)
- You think you need to be seen, but the problem is not urgent
Contact Doctor During Office Hours
- Ingrown nail causing mild pain, but no pus
- Swollen toes
- Pain keeps you from work or other activities
- Toe pain lasts more than 7 days
- Toe pain or loss of feeling happens often
- You have diabetes and your toes feel like they are burning, tingling or numb
- You have corns, callouses, or oddly-shaped toes
- Can't move the toes normally
- You have other questions or concerns
Self Care at Home
- Mild toe pain
Care Advice for Stomach Pain
What You Should Know About Stomach Pain:
- Mild stomach pain can be caused by something simple. It could be from gas pains or eating too much.
- Sometimes, stomach pain signals the start of a viral infection. This will lead to vomiting or loose stools.
- Watching your child for 2 hours will help tell you the cause.
- Here is some care advice that should help.
Lie Down:
- Have your child lie down and rest until feeling better.
Clear Fluids:
- Offer clear fluids only (such as water, flat soft drinks or half-strength Gatorade).
- For mild pain, offer a regular diet.
Prepare for Vomiting:
- Keep a vomiting pan handy.
- Younger children often talk about stomach pain when they have nausea. Nausea is the sick stomach feeling that comes before they throw up.
Pass a Stool:
- Have your child sit on the toilet and try to pass a stool.
- This may help if the pain is from constipation or diarrhea.
- Note: for constipation, moving a warm wet cotton ball on the anus may help.
Do Not Give Medicines:
- Any drug (like ibuprofen) could upset the stomach and make the pain worse.
- Do not give any pain medicines or laxatives for stomach cramps.
- For fever higher than 102° F (39° C), acetaminophen (such as Tylenol) can be given.
What to Expect:
- With harmless causes, the pain is most often better or gone in 2 hours.
- With stomach flu, belly cramps may happen before each bout of vomiting or diarrhea. These cramps may come and go for a few days.
- With serious causes (such as appendicitis), the pain worsens and becomes constant.
Call Your Doctor If:
- Pain becomes severe
- Constant pain lasts more than 2 hours
- Mild pain that comes and goes lasts more than 24 hours
- You think your child needs to be seen
- Your child becomes worse
Extra Help - Worried Stomach:
- Help your child talk about events that trigger the stomach pain. Talk to your child about how to cope with these the next time around.
- Help your child worry less about things she can't control.
- To treat the pain, help your child get very relaxed. Lying down in a quiet place and taking slow deep breaths may help. Make the belly go up and down with each breath. Then try to relax all the muscles in the body. Think about something pleasant. Listening to audios that teach how to relax might also help.
- Make sure your child gets enough sleep.
- Make sure that your child doesn't miss any school because of stomach pains. Stressed children tend to want to stay home when the going gets rough.
- Caution: your child should see her doctor for an exam. Do this before concluding frequent stomach pains are from worrying too much.

