The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONVerdict Score 70

A nerve between your foot bones gets squeezed so often it scars over — every step pinches it.

Squeeze the skin between your 3rd and 4th toes — press from top and bottom with your thumb and index finger. Burning or shooting pain? That's the clinical test physical therapists use (96% sensitivity, 96% specificity). If it's positive, your first step today is changing your shoes. TREATMENT: Tier 1 — Wide toe-box footwear + metatarsal pad placed PROXIMAL to the heads (4-6mm, firm material) Tier 1 — US-guided corticosteroid injection (1-2 max, methylprednisolone 40mg, 4-6 week interval) — best for lesions <6.3mm Tier 2 — Alcohol sclerotherapy (4% ethanol, 3-7 injection series, US-guided) — chemical neurolysis Tier 2 — Pain neuroscience education + intrinsic foot loading (BFR → HSR progression) What doesn't work: Pad directly on pain, blind injections, serial CSI on large neuromas (>6.3mm), passive modalities alone

  1. What this actually is: It's not a tumour — it's permanent scar tissue that's formed around a nerve that kept getting pinched between your foot bones.
  2. What most people get wrong: Putting the insole pad directly under the painful spot makes it worse — the pad needs to go proximal (behind) the painful area to splay the bones apart.
  3. The first thing to start doing: Switch to wide toe-box shoes immediately — this is the single most important change, and everything else is an adjunct to it.

Think of an electrical cable running through a conduit that's slightly too narrow. Every time you take a step, the conduit walls squeeze together. Over months and years, the cable develops scar tissue where it keeps getting pinched. That scar tissue makes the cable thicker, which means the squeeze gets worse with every step. The burning, shooting pain isn't the cable breaking — it's the alarm system saying the pinching is happening again.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
Physio Engine · Ankle / Foot

Morton's Neuroma

A nerve between your foot bones gets squeezed until it scars over — then it hurts with every step

Ankle / Foot MODERATE Conviction No Current CPG
🚨 Red Flags — When to Seek Urgent Help
Rapidly expanding mass + rest pain — rule out malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour. Don't treat as neuroma without imaging first.
Foot pain + fever + redness, especially in a diabetic patient — rule out osteomyelitis. Requires urgent imaging and antibiotics, not an insole.
Disproportionate pain + skin colour or temperature changes — possible Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS). Needs specialist pain management before any loading programme.
Progressive weakness or rising sensory loss up the leg — rule out tarsal tunnel syndrome or L5/S1 nerve root compression, not isolated forefoot pathology.

⚑ If any of the above apply: book an urgent appointment with your GP or go to urgent care. Do not start self-treatment.

The Takeaway — Do This Now
Squeeze the skin between your 3rd and 4th toes. Feel that burning or shooting sensation?
Use your thumb (underneath) and index finger (on top) to pinch the webspace between your 3rd and 4th toes — or 2nd and 3rd if that's where the pain is. A positive result is that shooting, burning, or electric sensation you normally feel in your shoes. This is the thumb-index squeeze test. Physical therapists use it in clinic because it has 96% sensitivity and 96% specificity — as accurate as ultrasound for confirming the diagnosis. If it's positive, your most important move today is reading the footwear section below.
A nerve between your foot bones gets squeezed until it builds up scar tissue — then it hurts with every single step
Think of an electrical cable running through a narrow metal conduit. Every time you take a step, the walls of the conduit close in slightly. Over months and years of repetitive compression — especially in narrow, pointed shoes — the cable develops scar tissue at the point where it keeps getting pinched. That scar makes the cable thicker, which means the conduit squeezes it harder, which produces more scar. The burning, shooting pain isn't the nerve breaking — it's your nervous system's alarm firing every time the conduit walls close in. The fix isn't pain medication. It's widening the conduit.
  • 1
    What this actually is: It's not a tumour — despite the name. It's permanent fibrous scar tissue wrapped around a nerve that kept getting pinched between your metatarsal bones.
  • 2
    What most people get wrong: Placing the insole pad directly under the painful spot makes it worse — it compresses the nerve harder. The pad must go proximal (behind) the heads to splay the bones apart.
  • 3
    The first thing to start doing: Switch to wide toe-box shoes immediately — this is the non-negotiable foundation. Everything else (orthotics, injections, exercises) only works if the foot has space to spread.
Best For
Burning or shooting pain in the 3rd or 2nd webspace that comes on with footwear and eases when shoes come off — especially if the thumb-index squeeze test is positive
Skip If
Rest pain, rapidly growing lump, skin colour or temperature changes, or pain spreading up the leg — these need professional assessment before any self-management
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling ↓

What Works + Exercise Prescription

Conservative management succeeds in 68-80% of cases when properly executed. The most common reason it fails isn't the wrong injection — it's wrong pad placement or continuing to wear the wrong shoes.

Morton's neuroma treatment — dark cinematic anatomy
1. Wide Toe-Box Footwear HIGH
Minimum 1cm clearance beyond the longest toe. Heel height ≤2cm. This is the foundation — every other treatment is an adjunct to it. Narrow shoes neutralise everything else. Occupational footwear assessment is as important as the clinical prescription.
Expected improvement: 1-4 weeks of strict compliance. ~50% of patients respond to footwear alone.
2. Metatarsal Pad Orthotic — Proximal Placement HIGH
4-6mm firm pad (Poron, cork, or high-density foam). Orthotic shell trimmed to sulcus length. The pad must be placed proximal (behind) the metatarsal heads — 1-2cm behind the head line. The goal is to splay the metatarsals apart and lift them, decompressing the nerve tunnel.
Self-Check — Pad Placement
Press the pad to your foot. The leading edge of the pad should sit about 1-2cm BEHIND where it hurts. If the pad is directly under the pain site — it's in the wrong place. Move it back.
3. US-Guided Corticosteroid Injection MODERATE
Methylprednisolone 40mg or Triamcinolone + 1% Lidocaine. 1.0-1.5mL. Maximum 2 injections, 4-6 week interval. Ultrasound guidance is required — blind injections have 16% lower response rate and risk plantar plate rupture.
6.3mm
The critical size threshold — lesions larger than this have poor corticosteroid response. US sizing before injection changes the decision.
Response rate: 50-80% at 3 months for lesions <6.3mm. Effect wanes at 12 months. CSI buys time — it doesn't cure. Permanent footwear change is required to prevent recurrence.
Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence (Alcohol Sclerotherapy + Active Rehab)
Alcohol Sclerotherapy (US-Guided) MODERATE
4-20% dehydrated ethanol, 0.3-1.2mL per injection. 3-7 injection series, 1-2 week intervals. Achieves chemical neurolysis — permanent effect rather than temporary steroid relief. Response rate 68-80%. Preferred when CSI has failed or lesion is larger.
Recent evidence supports 4% concentration as effective as higher doses with less risk of adjacent tissue necrosis.
Intrinsic Foot Loading Programme LOW — No Direct RCTs
No Morton's neuroma-specific exercise RCTs exist. Extrapolated from forefoot biomechanics and adjacent pathology evidence. Goal: improve transverse arch mechanics and reduce dynamic metatarsal compression.
Short Foot Exercise
3 × 10 holds 5 sec hold Daily
Sit with foot flat. Draw the ball of your foot toward your heel — creating an arch — without curling toes. Hold 5 seconds, release.
Effort in foot arch muscles. Stop if sharp forefoot nerve pain.
Toe Splay and Spread
3 × 10 5 sec hold Daily
Barefoot. Spread all toes as wide as possible. Hold 5 seconds. Trains forefoot splay mechanics — the same movement the orthotic should be facilitating passively.
Gentle stretch between toes. Stop if burning occurs.
Slow Calf Raises — Single Leg (Subacute)
3 × 12 3s down / 3s up 3× per week
When acute nerve pain has settled. Single-leg slow calf raise — 3 sec eccentric down, 3 sec concentric up. Progressive loading of foot intrinsics and calf-foot kinetic chain.
VAS ≤3/10. Zero shooting or burning pain during or after.
Pain Neuroscience Education (PNE) MODERATE
1-2 sessions with a physical therapist addressing the neurological pain mechanism, kinesiophobia, and activity guidance. Important when fear of movement has developed secondary to chronic nerve pain. Reduces kinesiophobia and improves function in neuropathic pain presentations. (Evidence extrapolated from PNE literature; no direct Morton's RCTs.)
Tier 3 — Emerging Evidence (HA Injection, ESWT)
Hyaluronic Acid Injection EMERGING
Sodium hyaluronate, 3-injection series, US-guided. Lower short-term efficacy than CSI but similar outcomes at 12 months. Option when steroids are contraindicated (e.g., uncontrolled diabetes). 1 RCT (2024).
ESWT EMERGING
Extracorporeal shockwave therapy. Limited retrospective data only. May be trialled when injections are contraindicated. Effect size small.

What Doesn't Work

  • Pad placed directly on the neuroma — increases compression. Must be proximal. This is the most common clinical error.
  • Unguided (blind) injections — 16% lower response rate; risk plantar plate rupture from steroid leaching outside the target space.
  • Serial CSI on large neuromas (>6.3mm) — delays appropriate escalation, causes fat pad atrophy, no meaningful neuroma reduction.
  • Passive modalities alone (untargeted ultrasound, generic TENS, massage) without mechanical change — no tissue remodeling effect; neurophysiological/contextual mechanism only.
  • High-concentration alcohol (>20%) as default — adjacent tissue necrosis risk without superior outcomes over 4% concentration.

When You're Ready to Resume Activity

Don't use "when it feels better" as the return criteria. Use these checkboxes:

Pain-free daily walking in modified footwear (wide toe-box + metatarsal pad) for ≥2 consecutive weeks
Bilateral calf raises, 3 × 15 bodyweight, without nerve pain during or after
Single-leg calf raise without shooting or burning forefoot pain
30 minutes continuous low-impact activity (walking, stationary bike) pain-free
Zero nerve pain (burning, shooting, paresthesias) during any lower body resistance training session
For runners: Begin with graded walk-run protocol in wide toe-box or zero-drop running shoes — not previous narrow running footwear

Bilateral lower body compound training (squat, deadlift, hip hinge) continues from Day 1 in appropriate footwear. Running and forefoot plyometrics are held until criteria above are met.

The Numbers — What to Expect

68-80%
Success rate with correctly executed conservative management (footwear + orthotics + 1-2 US-guided CSI) — systematic reviews
75-85%
Patient satisfaction with surgical neurectomy (Zhang 2023 meta-analysis, 16 studies). Reoperation rate: 5.3-6.1%

The most common driver of unnecessary surgery is poor-quality conservative care — wrong pad placement, narrow footwear kept in use, unguided injections. Surgery is indicated when conservative management has been correctly executed and genuinely failed (≥4.5-6 months, ≥2 US-guided CSI, neuroma >6.3-8mm confirmed on US). Dorsal and plantar neurectomy have equivalent outcomes — dorsal allows earlier weight-bearing, plantar has lower sensory loss rate (48.5% vs lower for plantar).

◈ MODERATE Conviction
The diagnostic evidence is strong — the thumb-index squeeze test and US imaging are well-validated. The treatment hierarchy (footwear → orthotics → CSI → sclerotherapy) has systematic review support. However, no Morton's neuroma-specific exercise RCTs exist, the governing ACFAS CPG is from 2009, and the 6.3mm threshold comes from cohort data rather than a controlled trial.
What would change this protocol?

1. A parallel-group RCT (N=120) comparing BFR/HSR intrinsic foot strengthening vs custom metatarsal-pad orthoses alone for lesions <5mm at 12 months — to determine whether active loading independently changes outcomes.

2. A double-blind multi-centre RCT (N=200) comparing 3-injection 4% alcohol sclerotherapy series vs single US-guided CSI at >24-month follow-up — to resolve the injection hierarchy beyond 12 months.

3. A prospective cohort study (N=500) tracking neuroma size in 1mm increments across purely conservative management — to definitively establish the natural history failure threshold (currently inferred as 6.3-8mm).

Get Free Weekly Protocols

Evidence-scored research on pain, rehab, and performance — direct to your inbox. No fluff, no pop-science.

Join The Verdict — Free

Key References

Xu Z et al., 2015 — Pooled analysis, US vs MRI diagnostic accuracy
US: Sn 90%, Sp 88%. MRI: Sn 93%, Sp 68%. US preferred for first-line imaging (dynamic assessment + lower cost). Landmark imaging comparison.
PMC7211826 — Morton's Neuroma Current Concepts Review, 2020
Injection outcomes, neuroma size effects, and 6.3mm threshold for predicting corticosteroid injection failure. Must-cite for treatment decision framework.
Zhang J et al., J Foot Ankle Res, 2023 — Meta-analysis, 16 studies, surgical approach comparison
Dorsal vs plantar neurectomy: equivalent complication and reoperation rates. Dorsal allows earlier weight-bearing; plantar has lower sensory loss rate.
PubMed PMID 38880729 — SR/MA, 8 studies, 549 neuromas, 2024
Sensory loss dorsal 48.5% vs lower for plantar approach. Similar reoperation rates (5.3% plantar vs 6.1% dorsal) and histopathology accuracy.
AJR Am J Roentgenol, 2022 — Cost-effectiveness analysis, US-guided injection vs surgery
US-guided injection pathway most cost-effective at $4,401.61/QALY. Supports conservative management first-line for eligible lesions.
ACFAS CPG, 2009 — American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons
Only condition-specific CPG — published 2009, exceeds 5-year recency threshold. Several recommendations have been superseded by subsequent evidence (injection guidance, size thresholds).

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

70 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

Get weekly evidence-based rehab verdicts

Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.

Subscribe free

Want a coach, not just research?

The Verdict is built by the same team behind Precision Metrics — a physique and health coaching practice with 300+ clients coached. Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT and Luke Holbrook lead the coaching.

Book a free consultation

Related free research

Pain & Rehab
Baxter's Nerve Entrapment — The Verdict
Pain & Rehab
Heel Fat Pad Syndrome — The Verdict
Pain & Rehab
Flexor Hallucis Longus Tendinopathy ("Dancer's Tendinitis") — The Verdict

There are 424 more inside

Conviction-scored verdicts on supplements, nutrition, training, physio, and recovery.

Explore all Get weekly verdicts