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DC 5284Musculoskeletal System

Secondary Conditions for Foot Injuries, Other (Residuals)

3 conditions have documented medical links to Foot Injuries, Other (Residuals). These may qualify as secondary service-connected disabilities if you can establish a medical nexus.

Evidence Strength:STRONGMODERATEEMERGING

Medical Rationale

Compensatory gait patterns from plantar fasciitis produce abnormal hip joint biomechanics through the lower extremity kinetic chain. The Trendelenburg-like gait adopted to minimize heel strike pain increases gluteus medius loading and produces greater trochanteric bursitis. Reduced stride length and altered push-off mechanics increase hip flexor (iliopsoas) contracture stress and limit normal hip extension during gait, producing anterior hip impingement. Studies of patients with unilateral foot pain demonstrate increased ipsilateral hip abductor EMG activity (38% above normal) and contralateral pelvis drop, both of which load the trochanteric bursa beyond physiological tolerance.

Key Studies

Reilly K et al. (2009) J Am Podiatr Med Assoc (foot pain and proximal joint loading); Menz HB et al. (2013) Arthritis Care Res (foot disorders and hip/knee pain association); Hamill J et al. (1999) Clin Biomech (lower extremity kinetic chain compensation).

Filing Tips

Hip imaging (X-ray or MRI) showing bursitis or degenerative changes. Physical therapy records documenting gait abnormalities and hip compensatory patterns. Orthopedic nexus letter connecting plantar fasciitis gait to hip loading changes. Document timeline showing hip pain developed after chronic plantar fasciitis. VA rates hip conditions under DC 5252 (limitation of thigh flexion) or DC 5253 (impairment of thigh rotation).

Medical Rationale

Plantar fasciitis forces compensatory gait modifications that redistribute lower extremity loading to the knee joint. Heel pain causes shortened stride length, lateral weight transfer, and reduced plantar flexion at push-off — all of which increase patellofemoral joint contact pressures. The antalgic gait pattern reduces normal ankle dorsiflexion, forcing the knee into greater flexion during stance phase, which increases quadriceps loading and patellar compression by 25-40%. Over months, this abnormal loading produces patellofemoral cartilage wear, patellar maltracking, and anterior knee pain. The compensatory pattern is particularly damaging during stairs, squatting, and prolonged standing — activities that are unavoidable in daily living.

Key Studies

Irving DB et al. (2007) J Am Podiatr Med Assoc (gait alterations in plantar fasciitis); Creaby MW et al. (2013) J Biomech (foot pain and knee loading); Gross KD et al. (2011) Arthritis Care Res (foot biomechanics and knee OA).

Filing Tips

Knee X-ray or MRI documenting patellofemoral changes. Physical therapy records noting gait abnormalities and compensatory patterns. Orthopedic or podiatric nexus letter addressing the biomechanical chain from heel pain to altered knee loading. Document timeline showing plantar fasciitis diagnosis preceded knee symptoms. Knee pain from gait compensation is rated under DC 5260/5261 based on limitation of flexion/extension.

Medical Rationale

Plantar fasciitis produces an antalgic gait that transfers abnormal mechanical stress to the lumbar spine through the kinetic chain. Heel pain causes reduced stride length, trunk lateral shift, and pelvis obliquity during the stance phase — all of which increase asymmetric loading on lumbar intervertebral discs and facet joints. The posterior chain (gastrocnemius, hamstrings, gluteals, erector spinae) compensates for reduced push-off power, producing chronic lumbar paraspinal muscle fatigue and spasm. Biomechanical studies demonstrate that unilateral foot pain produces measurable increases in contralateral lumbar paraspinal EMG activity and intradiscal pressure. The effect is amplified in patients who must stand or walk for prolonged periods.

Key Studies

Brantingham JW et al. (2006) J Manipulative Physiol Ther (lower extremity kinetic chain and spine); Menz HB et al. (2013) Arthritis Care Res (foot disorders and back pain); Dufour AB et al. (2009) Arthritis Rheum (foot pain and lower extremity disability).

Filing Tips

Lumbar spine imaging showing degenerative changes. Physical therapy or chiropractic records documenting antalgic gait from plantar fasciitis and compensatory back pain. Physiatrist or orthopedic nexus letter addressing the kinetic chain mechanism. Document how plantar fasciitis limited your ability to exercise and maintain core strength, contributing to back vulnerability. VA rates lumbar strain under DC 5237 based on range of motion and functional limitation.

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