What Causes Chronic Feet Pain And Numbness In The Ball Of My Foot?
It's the nerves
Detailed Answer:
several points. Let's start with what is in the foot. There's the skin and the surface, things can irritate it. Yeast infections can cause erosions into the skin with cracks, redness, itching peeling... you don't have this.
Next is the muscle. One can have muscle pain from a number of causes. It is tender both to the touch and with moving the muscles. Or, with poor circulation, the pulses would be ABSENT, it would be cold, discolored, and ache like a sore muscle with exertion... you don't have this.
Next is the tendons and connective tissue. Those are in the center of the foot mainly. they are deep and central to the foot and hurt like a sore tendon. They have no temperature component, they hurt to move, etc. Not likely
Nerves are all over the foot. The pain is variable but often has sharp, numb, electrical, or temperature components. The same nerves control circulation of the foot so big sudden changes in the circulation of the foot going from hot to cold to white to red or blue are usual with nerve problems.
These can be from cigarettes, diabetes, thyroid, changes in mineral, vitamin, or hormone levels (can occur as part of menopause). Anything that is a nerve damper will work on it. There may not be a safer drug than gabapentin. Look up the overdose literature on it; see what is a fatal dose. There almost isn't one (unlike, say, water or iron or tylenol or asprin or most everything which are fatal at high doses).
Generally for any disease we would try to find if there is an underlying condition and also treat the symptoms.
not quite sure about the question
Detailed Answer:
Certainly without actually being there I cannot prescribe, or order tests or give definite information.
And, there's generally useful information.
Pain that is a THICK NUMBNESS and episodic and not with obvious trauma is VERY LIKELY TO BE FROM A NERVE PROBLEM (NEUROPATHY).
Causes of nerve problems can be cigarettes, diabetes, thyroid, changes in mineral, vitamin, or hormone levels (can occur as part of menopause).
Anything that is a nerve damper will work on it. There may not be a safer drug than gabapentin.
Generally, naming the disease for the underlying symptoms then listing nearly all the underlying causes is considered answering what the underlying cause is.