Plantar Fasciitis Embolization: A Referral Guide for Podiatrists and Orthopedic Specialists

For podiatrists and orthopedic specialists managing patients with refractory plantar fasciitis, you know the clinical challenge all too well. A subset of your patients completes every conservative protocol — physical therapy, custom orthotics, cortisone injections, shockwave therapy — and still presents with debilitating heel pain months or years later. For these patients, the conversation often shifts to plantar fascia release surgery, a procedure that carries meaningful recovery time and its own set of risks.

Plantar fasciitis embolization (PFE) now offers a minimally invasive treatment option that bridges the gap between failed conservative management and surgical intervention. At Fox Vein & Vascular in Manhattan, David Fox, MD, FACS, RPVI — a board-certified vascular surgeon with more than 28 years of experience — performs PFE as part of a collaborative care model with referring physicians. This guide is designed to help you determine when a PFE referral may be appropriate and what to expect from the process.

REAL PATIENT RESULTS

Patient Testimonials

When to Consider Referring for PFE

Not every patient with plantar fasciitis is a candidate for embolization. PFE is specifically designed for the subset of patients whose symptoms have become chronic and have not responded adequately to standard conservative care. Consider a referral when your patient presents with the following:

  • Chronic plantar fasciitis lasting six months or longer— symptoms that have persisted despite consistent, guideline-directed treatment
  • Failure of multiple conservative modalities— including physical therapy, orthotics, cortisone injections, shockwave therapy, or PRP injections
  • Imaging demonstrating plantar fascia thickening(greater than 4mm) and/or neovascularity — findings that indicate an ongoing inflammatory process driven by abnormal microvascular networks
  • Patient seeking alternatives to plantar fascia release surgery— particularly those who cannot afford the downtime or who prefer a less invasive approach
  • Patients with comorbidities that increase surgical risk— including diabetes, obesity, or conditions that complicate wound healing and postoperative recovery

If your patient fits this clinical profile and you’ve exhausted your standard treatment algorithm, PFE provides a logical next step before considering surgical referral.

Patient Selection Criteria

Selecting the right patients for PFE referral helps ensure the best outcomes and a productive collaboration. Here’s how to think about candidacy from a clinical standpoint.

Ideal Candidates

  • Chronic symptoms lasting six to twelve months or longer with no sustained relief
  • Failed at least two conservative treatment modalities (e.g., physical therapy plus cortisone, orthotics plus shockwave)
  • Imaging evidence of neovascularityon MRI or Doppler ultrasound — this is the hallmark finding that identifies the vascular target for embolization
  • Motivated patients with realistic expectations who understand that improvement occurs gradually over weeks to months
  • Patients cleared by your office for vascular evaluation

Less Ideal Candidates

  • Acute plantar fasciitis(fewer than six months of symptoms) — these patients are still within the window where conservative care is most likely to succeed
  • Significant structural deformity requiring surgical correction— patients whose heel pain is primarily biomechanical in origin and requires operative correction of underlying anatomy
  • Severe peripheral arterial disease (PAD)— arterial insufficiency that may complicate catheter-based access or compromise healing

When candidacy is unclear, Dr. Fox welcomes the opportunity to evaluate and will communicate his findings and recommendations back to your office.

The PFE Procedure: Clinical Overview

Plantar fasciitis embolization is a transarterial, catheter-based procedure that selectively targets the neovascular branches supplying the inflamed plantar fascia. The technique is rooted in the same musculoskeletal embolization principles used in genicular artery embolization (GAE) for chronic knee osteoarthritis — a procedure with a well-established clinical evidence base.

Here is a brief procedural overview:

  • Access:A small-caliber catheter is introduced through a tiny puncture — typically at the ankle or dorsum of the foot — with no surgical incision required
  • Navigation:Using real-time fluoroscopic guidance, Dr. Fox navigates the catheter into the arterial branches feeding the area of neovascularity within the plantar fascia
  • Embolization:Microscopic embolic particles are delivered to selectively reduce abnormal blood flow to the neovascular network, interrupting the inflammatory cycle that perpetuates pain
  • Anesthesia:The procedure is performed under local anesthesia with optional conscious sedation — no general anesthesia is required
  • Duration:Approximately 60 to 90 minutes
  • Setting:Fully outpatient — patients are discharged the same day

The procedure does not alter the structural integrity of the plantar fascia, making it fundamentally different from surgical release. It targets the vascular component of chronic inflammation while preserving normal tissue architecture.

Clinical Evidence

The clinical foundation for PFE draws on the broader body of musculoskeletal embolization literature. Pioneering work by Okuno et al. demonstrated that targeted embolization of abnormal neovessels in musculoskeletal structures can produce significant, durable pain relief in patients with chronic, treatment-resistant conditions. This approach has been most extensively studied in the context of genicular artery embolization for knee osteoarthritis, where published data support its efficacy and safety profile.

Applying the same principles to the plantar fascia, early clinical data and ongoing studies have shown encouraging results:

  • 80 to 90 percent of patients report significant pain reductionfollowing the procedure
  • Improvements are typically observed gradually over two to six weeks, with substantial relief by two to three months
  • The safety profile is favorable, with a low incidence of serious adverse events
  • Additional PFE-specific studies are ongoing and continue to expand the evidence base

Dr. Fox stays current with the evolving literature and is happy to discuss specific studies or share relevant clinical data with referring providers. For a deeper look at outcomes, visit our PFE success rates and clinical evidence pages.

What Your Patient Can Expect

When you refer a patient for PFE, they can expect a streamlined experience with minimal disruption to their daily life. Here is a summary you can share with patients or include in your referral discussion:

  • Outpatient procedure— no hospital admission; patients go home the same day
  • Walking the same day— most patients are weight-bearing immediately after the procedure
  • Return to work in one to two days— many patients resume desk work or light duties within 24 to 48 hours
  • Gradual improvement— pain relief develops progressively over two to six weeks, with the most significant gains typically realized by two to three months
  • Minimal activity restrictions— patients are advised to avoid high-impact activities for a brief period but can return to normal routines relatively quickly
  • Scheduled follow-up— Dr. Fox follows patients at regular intervals to monitor progress and document outcomes

Importantly, referring physicians are kept informed throughout the process. Dr. Fox provides a written report after the initial consultation and communicates treatment progress to your office so you can coordinate any ongoing biomechanical or rehabilitative care.

The Referral Process

Referring a patient for PFE evaluation is straightforward. Here’s how to get started:

How to Refer

Call:(212) 362-3470 to schedule a consultation for your patient

Fax

Send a referral to the office at 212-362-3496

Online

Direct your patient to foxvein.com/contact-us/ to request an appointment

What to Include with the Referral

To help Dr. Fox prepare for the consultation, please include the following when available:

  • Relevant imaging — MRI, diagnostic ultrasound, or X-ray reports
  • Treatment history — a summary of conservative modalities attempted, duration of each, and patient response
  • Current medication list — including anticoagulants, NSAIDs, and supplements
  • Any pertinent medical history — particularly vascular conditions, diabetes, or bleeding disorders

Typical Timeline

  • Referral to consultation:Most patients are seen within one to two weeks of referral
  • Consultation to procedure:If PFE is recommended and the patient elects to proceed, the procedure is typically scheduled within two to four weeks
  • Post-procedure communication: Dr. Fox sends a written report to your office following the consultation and again after the procedure, including findings and follow-up recommendations
MEET DR. FOX

About Dr. Fox

David Fox, MD, FACS, RPVI is a board-certified vascular surgeon with more than 28 years of clinical experience. He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and holds the Registered Physician in Vascular Interpretation (RPVI) credential. Dr. Fox is an attending surgeon at Lenox Hill Hospital and practices at Fox Vein & Vascular on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

Dr. Fox has developed expertise in both genicular artery embolization (GAE) for knee osteoarthritis and plantar fasciitis embolization (PFE) — making him one of a select number of physicians in the New York metropolitan area offering both musculoskeletal embolization procedures. His vascular surgery background provides the catheter-based skills and imaging expertise essential to performing these technically demanding procedures safely and effectively.

WHAT MAKES US DIFFERENT

Collaborative Care Model

Dr. Fox views PFE as a complement to your care, not a replacement. The collaborative model works as follows:

Your role

You manage the biomechanical and rehabilitative aspects of care — orthotics, physical therapy, gait analysis, and ongoing monitoring

Dr. Fox’s role

He addresses the vascular component of chronic plantar fasciitis through targeted embolization of the abnormal neovascular networks sustaining inflammation

The patient benefits

From a coordinated treatment approach that addresses both the structural and vascular contributors to their chronic heel pain

Patients are returned to your care after the procedure. Dr. Fox communicates his findings, treatment details, and follow-up recommendations so you can seamlessly continue managing your patient’s recovery and long-term foot health. This partnership ensures the patient receives comprehensive care without any gaps in communication.

PFE is not designed to replace the work you do — it’s designed to give you an additional tool for the patients who need it most. When conservative treatment fails and your patient isn’t ready for surgery, embolization offers a path forward that keeps you at the center of their care.

REAL PATIENT RESULTS

Real people. Real results.

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START WITH A SIMPLE CONSULTATION

Discuss a Patient Referral

To discuss whether a specific patient may benefit from plantar fasciitis embolization — or to learn more about PFE and the referral process — contact Dr. Fox’s office directly.

Dr. Fox welcomes the opportunity to speak with referring providers about complex cases, share clinical data, and build a collaborative relationship that serves your patients’ best interests.

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