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#Shoes For Leg Length Discrepancy
shoeliftexpress · 2 years
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Newly famous are limbering shoe lift that make you look taller. Shoe carry as the name indicates, growth someone's pinnacle. It additionally allows again, knee, and other ailments. Shoe bring specific is proper right here to help!
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expressshoelift · 2 years
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We often see Leg Length Discrepancy Lifts but don't understand why they happened. Let's know today why they occur and what their symptoms are. Functional discrepancies occur when the bones are not the same length, but an oral alignment issue causes symptoms and signs of a true LLD. This could be due to the following, as well as other functional problems.
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adboy123456 · 8 months
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menedits · 11 months
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I made her plus size because I need more body type representation. I added some cherry leaves tail,made her skin red,added some more tattoos,white freckles,made her red,yellow and green because there's touch pink.I made her more punk and added some pigtails that looks like explosive. Anyway Sir Pentious and Cherri Bomb relationships dynamics is Slow burn and enemies to lovers though. I really hate that her hair doesn't look good,the x cross doesn't make any sense and the shoes that are boots or flat shoes is really doesn't make any sense.I headcanon that she have leg length discrepancy.
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briarpatch-kids · 9 months
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okay i like sending in anon asks so I'll complain here
leg length discrepancy SUCKS . like actually
one of my legs is shorter by like 3cm, barely noticable and honestly barely counts, but it's my biggest problem
I have to wear an insole, which means I cant wear low top shoes, I have to buy a new one and wait for like a month for it to be finished making (because they're custom made) every time I get new shoes, which means I have a month of my knee and general leg pain being terrible, oh, and also it's not free even though I live in a country with free healthcare
leg length discrepancy also caused my scoliosis 😔
That sucks hardcore. Even a small discrepancy can cause a lot of problems like you said!
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mystery-star · 4 months
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Wow I can’t believe that 2023 is now (almost) over. So much has happened this year and in retrospect I am quite glad about all of it, even what first seemed negative. Just a short overview:
I finished my apprenticeship and everything that came with it (final project, diploma celebration, graduation trip, finishing school etc)
Started a new job after the apprenticeship (tho in the same company) and the team is so nice.
The name change on Tumblr and definitely cutting all strings to HP
Instead getting back into LOTR and Star Trek that were two old fandoms
Therefore also picking up 3 old fanfics again and actually publishing or continuing them
The Russell discord gaining more life and finding all those amazing friends there, love you so much folks!
And generally having made a few more friends on Tumblr/deepened friendship with others, you all are SO. AMAZING. too.
Getting in to gifmaking and finally gaining more traction for my blog again
Started reading (more) books again and love it just as much as I used to years ago.
Started a second blog about mental health and all because I did research and self diagnosed myself (I might share that later when I feel ready)
And in relation to this of course having learned a lot about myself
Also can’t believe I turned 25 that year, like wow in my head I’m still 20 or so.
Getting back into drawing and actually starting to like it
Changing a medicine recipe that gives me less side effects and therefore improving life-quality
Getting diagnosed with leg length discrepancy and being prescribed inlays for my shoes that I need to wear everyday now.
Downloading a Self-care app that gives me life routine and all and motivates me to do stuff I always postponed or forgot
And of course watching a lot more Russell Crowe movies (and rewatching known ones)
Emotional rollercoaster like all the time since summer
Getting an assessment talk at a therapist for next year that if everything goes well I can get into therapy (and get an official diagnosis)
and of course a lot more, like tiny little things everyday that often moved me deeply
Would like to tag all fantastic people I met that year but I’m sure I’d forget some and wouldn’t want anyone to feel left out.
And even if we only shortly or never interacted in 2023 or before I still love you and wish you all the best for  the coming year!
That being said: I wish everyone a HAPPY NEW YEAR and a great 2024!!
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beyondthisdarkhouse · 2 years
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Shoe history: The personal side
I'm trying to break my posts into smaller, more digestible lumps of less than a thousand words each, so this one is boring technical stuff about my starting search parameters when looking for shoes to make and techniques to use. My chronic hyper-pronation and a significant leg length discrepancy (as well as some stuff about my ankle) are tough for me to accommodate.
I've got a lot of research to write up about shoes and their history that isn't really useful to me, except as examples of what won't work right now. Western fashion has been absolutely dominated by high heels since they burst onto the scene in the late 1500s, in a history that has both fascinated and surprised me. I'll write it up, but in conclusion, high heels are absolutely not for me.
Mooostly because I already have uhhh, a lot going on with my heels already.
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The biggest thing I need to accommodate for in any pair of shoes is that one of my legs is two inches (5 cm) longer than the other. I turned down surgeries to prevent this when I was in elementary school, and damn I regret that now.
General reference points: Very few humans have perfectly identical leg lengths. According to research I've seen, leg length difference (LLD) of up to 3 cm is usually mild and only rarely requires treatment like corrective shoe inserts. LLDs greater than 6 cm are considered "severe" and corrective surgery is usually recommended.
I sit in the "moderate" LLD category of 3-6cm; doctors were concerned when I was five, thought I was fine when I was 8, but by the time I was 20, the strain on my knees and hips from walking unevenly was quite literally crippling. That's the era I walked with a cane, looked into wheelchairs, and took two years of wearing a 7/8" (2.2 cm) shoe lift before my pain abated enough in every joint but one to figure out that also, I'd been walking on a torn ligament in my knee for a couple years too.
(The day that I tore it, I was already in screaming amounts of pain from hip to toe, so I noticed it less than I might have. I honestly should have gone ahead and gotten a walker or wheelchair during that period, but my doctor then was very NO IF YOU GET A MOBILITY DEVICE ALL YOUR MUSCLES WILL ATROPHY AND THEN YOU'LL DIE. I should probably have a walker/wheelchair/scooter now, but I've so carefully excluded things that require lots of walking or standing out of my life that it never feels that pressing a need for my money. But I digress.)
For me, this means an orthopedic build-up:
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Usually, this means that I take my shoes to a nice person who carefully slices off the bottom of the sole on one of them, and then glues layers of foam to the bottom of the shoe. If the sole is thick enough that the bottom of the sole can be salvaged, he re-attaches it; if it isn't, he puts some other form of rubber soling on the bottom.
(Petty: This always makes me feel very selfconscious when walking in snow or mud. "Crap, I can't commit a crime here! I have mismatched shoes so Sherlock Holmes would catch me for sure.")
(Possibly more valid but also petty: The material used to create the lift is usually EVA foam, which comes in a limited range of solid colours. This makes matching build-up material to a shoe that's anything but white or black extremely difficult. Paint on the EVA tends to scuff off easily, and rubber paints that work on the rest of the sole go kinda weird on the EVA. EVA picks up paint and discolouring stains at a different rate than the soling around it, and responds differently to cleaning. This means that even when I find nice shoes that can be built up, the build-up feels glaringly obvious to me, so even if other people don't notice, it destroys a lot of my own pleasure in them.)
A shoe lift does increase my risk of stepping wrong and twisting my ankle, like with any platform shoe. This was especially true when I first started wearing one. It was safest for me to wear hi-tops or ankle boots that provided my ankle with a lot of stability from top to bottom, even though the ones I could afford (and that came small enough to fit me) were generally garish, juvenile, and absolutely not in any fashion I really wanted to wear. I hated shoes; shoes made me miserable. I tried not to think about them and whined when one pair fell apart and needed replacement. That was life.
And god, between the LLD, the bum knee, and the hyperpronation, it took me years and years before the ankle of my short leg could function normally. It was hypermobile in some directions, and hypomobile in others.
Basically: My muscles, tendons, and ligaments had all grown so used to the skewed way I walked and stood, that a lot of them were too short to comfortably reach the "ideal" standing position. It's easier to fix muscles that are too long, because building up muscles through exercise is basically asking them to contract and grow to get better at contracting. But while muscles will bitch when they're stretched but mostly get used to it, the entire point of tendons and ligaments is to not stretch. They're the body's great stabilizers. So the day my podiatrist got the x-ray back showing a 2" discrepancy in my foot, he said, "We're not going to put you on a 2" lift today. We're going to take at least five years to get you there."
(I'd like to take this moment to shout out my illiotibial band and extensor hallucis longus muscle, which were the real MVPs of a team that worked to make my life a living hell for those five straight years. I should have been in massage therapy every other week, but who can afford that, lol amirite? I started doing yoga, got massages as often as I could afford them, and made heat pads in my bed and a drinking glass, pitcher of water, and bottle of painkillers on my dresser a permanent part of my bedroom decor.)
I worry that people will take this blog as a how-to guide on how to make their own shoes for their own nonstandard feet. It is not. It is a guide to how to figure out how to make one's own shoes for one's own custom feet, so I absolutely need to explain just what that process has been thus far. It feels like my history is in itself a cautionary tale to be careful when tinkering with your own shoes. Even a small adjustment can affect a lot. If you're in pain, you need to know why before you can figure out how to make it better. I needed examinations by doctors both general and specialized, x-rays, MRIs, gait assessments, and functional assessments before we had any kind of grip on things, and it has taken shoe lifts, custom orthotics, ten pairs of shoes, dozens of hours of physiotherapy, hundreds of hours of massage, three exercise modalities, fifteen years, and half my liver to get to where I am, trying to make shoes that might fuck me up.
Please, for the love of GOD, do NOT use this blog's advice to make shoes for other people's nonstandard feet. I urge you to make use of every medical professional, medical resource, scientific study, and experienced shoemaker in existence before you rely on me. "Fuckups trained and competent medical professionals made when making shoes for me" could be an entirely separate post, so imagine how much worse things could be without all their training. Modern medicine has been essential to figuring out what the fuck is wrong with me, and figuring out which shoe modifications will help me and how they will work.
(And do not give me that "Well back in the OLD DAYS people didn't need--" crap. You know what happened to people like me back when we went barefoot or wore shoes made by the town cobbler? We were called cripples and we walked with sticks. If we needed to get someplace we couldn't walk to and were lucky, someone strong could carry us, or we could ride on an animal or in a vehicle. If we weren't lucky, we dragged ourselves around on the ground and didn't get very far.
I love the past, with its depth and richness. I love dressing up in its old clothes to feel what it felt like. I know that people with disabilities have always been loved and valuable members of human society. But it's precisely from knowing the history of disability that I can truly appreciate just how powerful and revolutionary modern medical science is. It's only by actually finding my spiritual forbears, people with disabilities like and unlike mine who lived centuries ago, that I can understand just how precious the unearned gift I have been given is, living in an era where scientific knowledge and medical treatment can benefit me.
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ouchiemyspine · 9 months
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basic info abt me: nonbinary, aromantic bisexual . 16 . he/xey . white . polish . learning , developmental and physical disabilities . voidpunk . cripplepunk
dni : proshippers , radqueer , radinclus , self proclaimed 'fandom moms' , anti xenogenders / neoprns , folks who act like theyre above discourse , nsfw blogs and cat haters (yes, im serious on cat haters)
info about my disabilities + other under the cut :)
nobody is OWED this information .. BUT ! i like typing about myself + this sideblog is all about disability so :
these are all diagnosed by professionals so dont come at me fake claiming bitches
as for physical disability : I have scoliosis (and unofficially lumbar hyperlordosis diagnosed by the lady who did my rehabilitation with back in the day) and limb length discrepancy in my legs, left leg shorter specifically, though i only need to wear a special shoe insole
other types of disability: adhd, asd, dyslexia, dysgraphia
I am legally considered disabled.
as for the non professional decided stuff :
I am semi verbal and probably have chronic pain of some kind but idk. wont highlight it.
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1800duckhotline · 1 year
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I don't think I've said it publicly before but other than being transgender best friends matei and jenica are also both disabled. jenica sickness basically leaves them often using crutches to walk, which they're used to, but when they are really tired they might use a regular wheelchair specific for getting around that they can move with independently (not a sports / active one). matei on the other hand was born with leg length discrepancy which at the time when he was still with his Rich family he was lucky enough to get surgery for. however the surgery didn't immediately fix the problem, so as an adult he has been for years relying on different shoe inside heights (idr what they're called in English) and he has a walking cane he uses all the time especially if he's outside. sometimes he does also use a wheelchair when he's supposed to walk long distances, though he tries to avoid doing so if possible. I like thinking of when they were both studying in university abroad, when they met again, having to spend a lot of time in the hospital bc of jenis condition and just Bonding. it's nice
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aboutandinfo · 2 years
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ARTIBETTER 1 Pair Height Increase Insole Air Cushion Shoe Inserts Lifts Elevator Shoes Insole Heels Lift Inserts for Leg Length Discrepancies Heel Spurs Achilles tendonitis- (1. 5CM)
ARTIBETTER 1 Pair Height Increase Insole Air Cushion Shoe Inserts Lifts Elevator Shoes Insole Heels Lift Inserts for Leg Length Discrepancies Heel Spurs Achilles tendonitis- (1. 5CM)
Price: (as of – Details)
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shoeliftexpress · 2 years
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Shoe Lifts for Kids Online
If you're looking for Shoe Lift for Kids online, you've come to the right place. Ubay is a great place to purchase children's shoe lifts. Besides offering the best prices in India, Ubay also has a number of festive offers, deals, and discounts. Check out these deals today! You'll find the perfect kid's shoe lift in no time! Listed below are some tips to get the right product.
Foot length discrepancy
One of the ways to treat leg length discrepancy in kids is to purchase a pair of proper shoes. While a standard shoe may correct the discrepancy, it will not solve the issue if it's not worn. Fortunately, there are shoe lifts for kids that can correct leg length discrepancy for some children. Here are some tips. Discrepancy in leg length in children is common and can be treated with shoe lifts.
Usually, leg length discrepancy in kids is under two centimeters. However, if the discrepancy is larger than two centimeters, it can lead to a variety of painful complications. These problems can include pain in the knees, back, or hip. Fortunately, there are several methods for treating leg length discrepancy in children. In some cases, the child may be able to walk and play without problems, but it is advisable to get an opinion from a professional doctor about whether shoe lifts for kids are right for them.
Types of shoe lifts
If your child has feet or leg length differences, shoe lifts for kids are a necessity. Kids with foot conditions may also benefit from kid's orthopedic shoes. There are a number of different types of kid's shoe lifts available, with different purposes. Here is an overview of the different types of lifts and their uses. Depending on your child's condition, you may find a different type of lift in a different style.
If the difference is only a few centimeters, a 1-centimeter lift may be enough. If your child's leg lengths are too long, a two-centimeter lift may be enough to correct the problem. For older children, a one-centimeter lift may fit inside the shoe, but the rest will have to be outside. Kids with congenital discrepancies may need a more substantial lift.
Fitting
If you are looking for Fitting shoe lifts for kids online, you are not alone. You can also find a variety of brands online. Different brands have different attributes, and people tend to choose them based on this. Before making a purchase, however, it is important to know your child's size, as different brands fit different sizes. A foot measurement device is an accurate way to measure the size of your child's foot. If you buy a pair online, you can avoid the traffic and hassles of a traditional shoe store.
Cost
If you are looking for the best price on Shoe for Short Leg, you can look online. There are many different stores online offering this product, and you should do your research before you purchase. Most stores offer free shipping, which is good news for you. However, there is no guarantee that a given company will deliver the exact item that you order. Before you decide to buy the product, make sure you read the product description carefully and contact the company if you have any questions.
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pqkwlovew · 2 years
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adboy123456 · 2 years
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menedits · 7 months
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Handsome Irish man wearing his special AFO brace and built up ortho boot!
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expressshoelift · 2 years
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How do Orthotics Correct Leg Length Discrepancies?
We often see Leg Length Discrepancy Lifts but don't understand why they happened. Let's know today why they occur and what their symptoms are. Functional discrepancies occur when the bones are not the same length, but an oral alignment issue causes symptoms and signs of a true LLD. This could be due to the following, as well as other functional problems:
The hip joint is surrounded by tight muscles, which results in hip elevation.
Scoliosis of     spine
Pronation:     Asymmetrical foot movements
What is leg length discrepancy?
Leg length discrepancy (LLD) is when one leg is shorter than the other for the same person. These discrepancies can be found in as high as 70% of the population.
Leg length discrepancies lift can be structural or functional, depending on their source. Because of the differences in their treatment, it is essential to distinguish between these two types.
Causes structural leg length discrepancies in the legs?
Structural Leg length discrepancies lift when one or both of the bones in the leg (the Femur and the Tibia) measure more extended than the bone(s), often causing discomfort and pain. This type of leg discrepancy can be congenital, surgical, or degenerative.
Leg Length Discrepancy Symptoms
The type, extent, and source of the leg length discrepancy will determine the symptoms. LLD symptoms include:
Lower back     pain
Potential     hip, knee, or foot pain
Walking with     a limp or poor balance
Feeling a     constant lean towards one side
Tired     quickly after long periods of activity or walking
Frequent     lower back or limb injuries without any apparent cause
It is     uncomfortable to stand or bend over for extended periods.
Treatment for Functional Leg Length Discordance
Functional discrepancies caused by muscular tightness or imbalance usually require stretching and strengthening. A pedorthist or podiatrist can provide Orthopedic Shoe lift and off-the-shelf orthotics. 
They can correct alignment problems such as asymmetrical foot movements. Functional discrepancies due to scoliosis can be treated by custom foot orthotics provided by one of the foot care professionals. Also, orthotics may provide lower extremity or back orthotics (braces) or a stretching routine and strengthening program. Chiropractors can help with alignment problems, regardless of whether the problem is structural or functional.
Orthopedic Shoes - What are they?
Shoes that support the foot, ankle, and leg are called orthopedic shoes. These shoes are usually designed for a particular purpose. An Orthopedic consultant can advise you on the need for these shoes, depending on your condition. For example, someone with cerebral palsy might require orthotic shoes.
What is the difference between orthotic shoes and regular shoes?
Orthopedic shoes are distinguished from regular shoes by specific design and characteristics. We've highlighted some of the key differences below:
1.     Additional widths and sizing options
Because everyone's feet are unique, many orthopedic brands offer three main widths (narrow/regular and comprehensive) and nearly unlimited sizes.
2. Taller upper-soles
Forefoot problems such as 'clawed toes' or 'crossed over toes' may require more space for their feet.
3. It's easier to attach.
Many orthopedic shoes have a hook and loop closure, making it easier for people with limited mobility or other functions to tighten.
Conclusion
An improperly fitted shoe Lifts for Kids can cause injury to your feet and provide little benefit. Your orthopedic consultant can help you save time and money. They will also be able to recommend shoes that provide the best support, comfort, and benefit.
Business Name: Shoe Lift Express
Country: United States
Address: 2900 Central Ave Suite 110, Homewood, AL 35209
Contact No: +18089385438
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