Sever's Disease Treatment in Rosanna: Heel Pain Help for Active Kids

Introduction

When a 10-year-old pulls up halfway through soccer training and limps off holding their heel, it’s natural to wonder whether it’s growth, footwear or simply too much sport. One of the most common culprits in active kids is Sever’s disease — an irritation of the heel growth plate caused by the repeated pull of the Achilles tendon and calf muscles.

At Bellevue Podiatry, we look at how your child moves, the shoes they train in, how much sport they’re doing, how tight their calves are, and exactly where the heel tenderness sits — so we can pin down what’s actually driving the pain. Treatment might involve load management, calf stretching, heel cushioning, footwear advice and, where it’s warranted, orthotic support, all aimed at easing symptoms while keeping your child active where we safely can.

In This Article

  • Sever’s disease commonly causes heel pain, limping, toe-walking and soreness during or after sport in active children.
  • It often flares during growth spurts — especially with running, jumping, hard surfaces, tight calves or unsupportive shoes.
  • Treatment usually combines load management, supportive footwear, heel cushioning, calf stretching, strengthening and a gradual return to sport.
  • A podiatry assessment can check gait, footwear, calf tightness, sporting load and heel tenderness to guide treatment.
  • See a podiatrist if heel pain limits sport, causes limping, worsens after activity, or doesn’t settle with rest.

When Your Child Limps Off the Field, You’re Not Alone

Young soccer player rubbing a sore heel on the sidelines after a game

Heel pain after sport is common in growing athletes and is worth a professional check to confirm the cause.

Heel pain after sport is common in growing children, but limping is worth checking early.

When your child limps off the field clutching their heel, it’s natural to worry — especially if they’re usually the first one running and the last to tire. You might notice them hobbling after training, pulling out of runs, or grumbling about sore heels once the match is over.

If you’re watching your child limp after football, seeking an assessment isn’t overreacting. Heel pain is common in growing children, but it’s still worth checking properly so you know what’s causing it and what your child can safely keep doing.

A paediatric podiatrist in Rosanna can look at your child’s walking pattern, their footwear, the structure of their foot and ankle, and how much sport they’re loading in each week. If you’re after Sever’s disease treatment in Rosanna, getting advice early can ease the pain, set your mind at rest, and give your child a clear plan to get back to sport.

What Is Sever’s Disease and Why Does It Happen?

How Sever’s Disease Develops

Three things stack up to irritate your child’s heel

📈
Rapid growth spurt

Bones lengthen faster than the calf and Achilles can stretch

Repeated running & jumping

Footy, netball and basketball on hard courts and ovals

🦵
Tight calf muscles

Extra pull travels down the Achilles to the heel

Traction on the heel’s growth plate (calcaneal apophysis)

The result: heel pain, limping and sore heels during or after sport

How a growth spurt, high-impact sport and tight calves combine to irritate the heel’s growth plate in Sever’s disease.

During a growth spurt, a child’s bones can lengthen faster than the muscles and tendons around them can keep up. When that happens, the Achilles tendon tugs harder on the soft growth plate at the back of the heel — an area called the calcaneal apophysis.

That irritation is what we call Sever’s disease, or calcaneal apophysitis. It isn’t a disease in the way most people picture one — it’s an overuse-related growth plate condition we see all the time in active kids who run, jump and change direction.

Sports like football, basketball, netball and athletics all load up the heel, and hard surfaces or flat, unsupportive shoes only add to it.

If you’ve been searching for children’s heel pain Rosanna or Sever’s disease treatment Rosanna, understanding the cause is the first step towards easing the pain, supporting healing, and getting your child moving again.

How to Tell If Your Child Has Sever’s Disease

Podiatrist gently squeezing the sides of a child's heel to check for Sever's disease

Key signs include pain when squeezing the sides of the heel, morning stiffness, and limping after sport.

Usually the first clue is heel pain that flares during or after sport and settles down with rest.

Your child might start limping, walking up on their toes, or quietly dropping out of running and jumping.

It can affect one heel or both, and it’s typically worse after activity on hard surfaces, in unsupportive shoes, or during a growth spurt.

In clinic, we see this most in active kids playing football, basketball, netball, athletics and similar high-impact sports.

Things you might notice:

& Pain when you gently squeeze the sides of the heel

& Morning stiffness, or sore heels getting out of bed

& Discomfort after running, jumping or training

& Relief once your child stops and rests

& Limping, or hanging back from sport they’d usually love

Sever’s disease comes back to irritation of the heel growth plate — usually a mix of fast growth, repeated impact and tight calf muscles.

If the pain keeps returning, it’s worth getting a proper podiatry assessment and the right kids’ heel pain treatment to settle symptoms and ease your child safely back into activity.

Sever’s Disease Treatment Options at Bellevue Podiatry

Podiatrist showing a child a gentle calf stretch as part of Sever's disease treatment

Treatment focuses on easing strain through load management, calf stretches and supportive footwear.

At Bellevue Podiatry, you’ll walk out with a clear plan to settle your child’s heel pain and adjust their activity safely — not a vague “rest and see how it goes”.

We’ll show you how heel cushioning, stretching and strengthening fit together to support recovery.

And we’ll talk through orthotics and the right footwear to take the load off that sore heel.

Settling the Pain and Adjusting Activity

To settle heel pain from Sever’s disease, we start by working out what’s irritating the heel and easing back the activities that keep flaring it up. With Sever’s disease treatment in Rosanna, you can expect clear, practical guidance rather than guesswork.

The goal is to take the strain off the heel growth plate while keeping your child active where we safely can — because total rest is hard on a sporty kid, and staying involved matters.

  • Ease back high-impact sport or training loads for a while.
  • Swap painful drills for lower-impact options where it makes sense.
  • Check footwear for support, fit and cushioning.
  • Let pain levels guide the return to play.

Your podiatrist will look at walking pattern, footwear, training habits, calf tightness and heel tenderness to explain why the pain’s there. For heel pain in children, getting on top of the load early tends to calm symptoms and cut down the flare-ups.

Heel Raises, Stretching and Strengthening

Building strength and flexibility through the calf, Achilles tendon and foot muscles helps take the pull off the heel growth plate as your child recovers. Exercises should be gentle, guided by pain, and added in gradually as things settle.

Start with calf stretches held steadily while your child breathes through it — no bouncing, no forcing. Once walking’s more comfortable, heel raises can come in to rebuild calf strength and ease the way back to sport.

Your child may feelYou can help by
Worried about the painKeeping movements gentle and controlled
Frustrated by restingNoticing progress and celebrating small wins
Unsure what’s safeFollowing podiatry guidance and skipping painful exercises
Keen to get back out thereBuilding strength gradually before returning to sport

At Bellevue Podiatry, we’ll set an exercise plan around your child’s assessment — their gait, footwear and symptoms. Stop any exercise if heel pain spikes, the limp returns, or pain lingers afterwards, and keep the programme simple, consistent and supervised.

Orthotics and the Right Footwear

Supportive shoes take load off your child’s heel — at school, running around, and on the sports field.

A good shoe gives cushioning, a firm heel counter and stable midfoot support, with enough structure to stop the heel sliding around.

If the pain hangs on despite activity changes and decent shoes, heel raises or orthotics may help by improving foot position and easing strain on the growth plate.

These work best after a proper podiatry assessment, so they actually suit your child’s foot type, sport and symptoms.

  • Pick runners with a firm heel counter, cushioning and good midfoot support.
  • Steer clear of flat, worn or floppy shoes for sport and long school days.
  • Use heel raises or custom orthotics only when they’re clinically warranted.
  • Replace shoes once the cushioning’s gone or the heel pain creeps back.

At Bellevue Podiatry, we can assess your child’s foot posture, footwear and activity load, then point you to the right shoes or orthotics for Sever’s disease and children’s heel pain.

Getting Your Child Back to Their Sport (and Keeping Them There)

Your Child’s Staged Return to Sport

Four steps back to the field

1
Calm it down

Settle the pain and ease off high-impact load

2
Rebuild

Calf stretches and strengthening as symptoms allow

3
Reintroduce

Graded return to running, jumping and drills

4
Back to play

Full training and games, keep monitoring symptoms

Move to the next step only while pain stays low and settles by the next morning.

A staged return-to-sport pathway for Sever’s disease: calm the pain, rebuild strength, reintroduce load, then return to full play.

Getting back to sport after Sever’s disease isn’t just about waiting for the heel pain to fade. We want to rebuild your child’s load tolerance, calf strength, foot control and confidence so they come back and stay back, without the same flare-up a fortnight later.

A safe return to sport means rebuilding strength, control and confidence — not just waiting for the pain to fade.

With the Sever’s disease treatment Rosanna families can access at Bellevue Podiatry, we usually start by easing off the painful running, jumping and high-impact drills, then bring activity back in planned stages. That gives the irritated heel growth plate time to adapt as your child keeps growing.

Signs Your Child Is Not Ready to Progress

Watch how your child moves during and after sport. If you spot limping after netball, pulling up mid-game in soccer, avoiding putting the heel down, or pain that’s worse the next morning, the heel isn’t coping with the current load.

Paediatric heel pain usually settles when we dial back training volume, sort out footwear, and keep a steady routine of calf and foot strengthening exercises. Those few things take the pressure off the heel while easing the way back to running and jumping.

Keeping Them Involved While They Recover

Your child often won’t need to stop sport altogether — but what they do should flex with their symptoms. Options worth considering:

  • Shorter training sessions
  • Lower-impact drills
  • Planned rest days
  • Easing off running or jumping for a while
  • Supportive footwear or heel cushioning
  • A simple home exercise routine

Steady progress beats a rushed return that sparks another flare-up. If the pain keeps coming back, a podiatry review can pin down the load, footwear or movement issues behind the ongoing heel pain.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can School Shoes Contribute to Sever’s Disease Symptoms?

They can. School shoes that are too flat, worn out, poorly fitted or short on heel cushioning can make Sever’s disease worse. In growing kids, all that repeated impact through the heel growth plate adds up — especially through a growth spurt or a big sport season.

You might notice the heel pain is worse after a long day at school, running on hard ground, or playing sport. Shoes with poor shock absorption or a sloppy heel let more strain travel through the Achilles tendon and heel.

Supportive school shoes — decent cushioning, a firm heel counter, a proper fit — can take the edge off. A podiatry assessment at Bellevue Podiatry can check your child’s footwear, gait, foot posture and activity load and guide the right plan.

Should My Child Avoid Going Barefoot at Home?

If padding around barefoot clearly winds up your child’s heel pain — particularly on hard tiles, timber or concrete — it’s worth limiting it.

Going barefoot sends more impact through the heel bone and pulls on that sensitive growth area at the back of the heel.

They don’t need rigid shoes indoors. Supportive runners, cushioned slippers, or sandals with arch support and a soft heel can make moving around the house comfier.

If footwear support helps, keep it up while the heel settles. And if the pain hangs on, worsens, or starts affecting sport and everyday walking, book a podiatry assessment so we can check gait, footwear and load and sort out a plan.

Is Heel Pain Worse During Growth Spurts?

Often, yes. Heel pain tends to show up more during growth spurts in active kids — usually Sever’s disease, where the heel growth plate gets irritated by the pull of the Achilles tendon and calf muscles.

In a growth spurt, the heel bone can lengthen faster than the soft tissue around it can stretch, so the pull at the back of the heel ramps up — most with running, jumping and sport.

What Symptoms Should You Look For?

Kids will often describe heel pain during or after activity, tenderness at the back or underneath the heel, or stiffness after sitting still. Some limp, dodge sport, or walk on their toes to keep weight off it.

The pain is usually tied to activity and eases with rest. Still, if it keeps going, get it checked to confirm what’s going on and rule out other causes.

What Can Help?

Early on, the focus is taking the load off and calming the irritation around the growth plate. Things that help:

  • Easing back on running, jumping and high-impact sport for a while
  • Supportive shoes with good cushioning
  • Heel raises or orthotics where they’re appropriate
  • Gentle calf stretching, if it’s tolerated
  • A short burst of ice after activity

If your child’s limping, the pain’s getting worse, or it won’t settle despite rest and footwear changes, it’s time for a podiatry assessment. At Bellevue Podiatry, we’ll check foot mechanics, activity load, footwear and growth-related factors and guide a safe return to sport.

Can Both Heels Be Affected at the Same Time?

Yes — both heels can flare at once, especially in active kids and teens. It usually happens when running, jumping, growth or a jump in training load stresses both heel growth plates.

It’s also normal for one heel to be worse than the other. That can come down to landing pattern, footwear wear, calf tightness, foot posture, or how your child moves in their sport.

If both heels hurt, don’t shrug it off. Easing impact, checking footwear and booking a podiatry assessment can pin down the cause and guide a safe return to sport.

Do Children Need Imaging for Suspected Sever’s Disease?

Usually not. We can generally diagnose Sever’s disease from your child’s heel pain, activity history, footwear, growth stage and a focused exam of the heel and Achilles tendonX-rays aren’t normally used to diagnose it.

Imaging might be worth it if the pain’s unusual, started after a real injury, hangs around at rest or overnight, or doesn’t improve with the right care.

An assessment with a podiatrist can confirm the likely cause and guide safe treatment — load management, footwear advice, stretching and heel support if it’s needed.

Conclusion

Sever’s disease doesn’t have to keep an active kid on the sidelines. With the right mix of load management, stretching, strengthening, footwear advice and support, you can ease the heel pain, help recovery along, and keep your child moving with confidence — and the good news is that most children recover fully, with no long-term problems.

At Bellevue Podiatry, we help families from Rosanna, Heidelberg, Watsonia, Ivanhoe and nearby suburbs manage growing heel pain with practical, personalised care. If your child’s limping after sport or struggling with sore heels, early advice makes all the difference.

Ready to get them back on the field? Book your child’s assessment online or call our Rosanna clinic on (03) 9457 2336. New patients can use code NEW80 for an $80 initial assessment.

Picture of Nicole Hardidge - Principal Podiatrist

Nicole Hardidge - Principal Podiatrist

Nicole is the Principal Podiatrist at Bellevue Podiatry in Rosanna. She holds a Post Graduate Certificate in Wound Care and is a Clinical Supervisor at La Trobe University. Nicole is passionate about solving complex foot problems and ensuring patients feel supported from diagnosis to recovery.