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bunion
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

bunion

Inflammation of the joint between the big toe and the first metatarsal bone. It tends to displace the big toe inwards, causing a bony prominence. It is due to the wearing of ill-fitting shoes.

Podiatry can remove painful callosities. Underlying foot problems may be treated with surgical shoes with a broad, deep toe. Exercises and physiotherapy to restore proper alignment of the bones of the foot may be of value in the early stages of the development of bunions, but have little success in established cases.

Tailor's bunion, or bunionette, is a bunion arising over a prominence on the outer aspect of the foot at the base of the little toe. It is said to have arisen in tailors as a result of their traditional sitting position with knees apart and outsides of the feet pressed to the ground. Treatment is mainly surgical.



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Bunions are a very common and often painful condition Medically known as hallux valgus, an estimated 33 per cent of women will develop bunions at some stage in their lives Bunions are a very common and often painful condition.
It was when I had to have a Hallux Valgus - bunion correction - that I began to concentrate more on Pilates and realised its benefits.
If uncontrolled, rheumatoid arthritis can lead to multiple deformities including hammer toes (where the toes bend at the knuckle and calluses develop at the tips of the toe), hallux valgus (bunions), and subluxation of the metatarsal heads (where the joints in the balls of the feet become so deformed that the balls of the feet and the toes become ?
 
 
 
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