Elevationist
Princess No-Pants
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2004
- Messages
- 5,234
Like a previous poster said, it really depends on the type and severity of the fracture.
I broke the second toe on my left foot in a car accident a few years ago. I often kick my shoes off when I drive, the crash impact made my foot fly up under the dash hard enough to break it. It snapped clean in half right above the the bottom joint, and pain went all through my foot for a good month, even in the boot/shoe thing I had to wear during recovery. I couldn't even grocery shop without needing an ECV, I couldn't imagine doing Disney on it.
The best thing to do is to "buddy tape" it. Basically, you put a bit of cotton between the broken toe and the strong one beside it, then tape them snuggly together. The healthy toe will essentially act as a splint for the broken one, and offer it support while it heals.
He'll want a hard-soled shoe to help prevent the toe bending too much as he walks. But you definitely want him in something that is loose or open on top. Cramming it into a sneaker or similar will just squeeze it too much, and enhance the pain. Not to mention you want to let blood flow as freely and easily to the toe as possible, to help it heal faster.
Also. Ibuprofen will be his best friend. Lol.
Hope this helps!
I broke the second toe on my left foot in a car accident a few years ago. I often kick my shoes off when I drive, the crash impact made my foot fly up under the dash hard enough to break it. It snapped clean in half right above the the bottom joint, and pain went all through my foot for a good month, even in the boot/shoe thing I had to wear during recovery. I couldn't even grocery shop without needing an ECV, I couldn't imagine doing Disney on it.
The best thing to do is to "buddy tape" it. Basically, you put a bit of cotton between the broken toe and the strong one beside it, then tape them snuggly together. The healthy toe will essentially act as a splint for the broken one, and offer it support while it heals.
He'll want a hard-soled shoe to help prevent the toe bending too much as he walks. But you definitely want him in something that is loose or open on top. Cramming it into a sneaker or similar will just squeeze it too much, and enhance the pain. Not to mention you want to let blood flow as freely and easily to the toe as possible, to help it heal faster.
Also. Ibuprofen will be his best friend. Lol.
Hope this helps!
