What Is Foot Drop?
Foot drop β also called drop foot β is a gait abnormality in which the person cannot lift the front part of the foot (dorsiflexion) during walking. The result is a characteristic slapping gait or the need to lift the knee higher than normal (steppage gait) to clear the floor. It is not a diagnosis itself but a symptom of an underlying neurological, muscular, or anatomical problem affecting the peroneal nerve or the L4-L5 nerve root.
At Pittsburgh Physical Medicine, we evaluate foot drop to determine whether the cause is peripheral nerve compression that may respond to conservative care, or whether it requires urgent medical referral.
Anatomy: Why the Foot Can't Lift
Dorsiflexion of the foot is controlled primarily by the tibialis anterior muscle, which is innervated by the deep peroneal nerve β a branch of the common peroneal nerve. The common peroneal nerve wraps around the fibular head (the outer, upper aspect of the knee) before dividing into its branches. It is the most commonly injured nerve in the lower extremity because of its superficial location at the fibular head.
Nerve root supply to this pathway comes from L4 and L5 β which is why lumbar disc herniations and spinal stenosis at these levels can cause foot drop.
Common Causes
Peroneal Nerve Compression
The most common cause of foot drop. The nerve can be compressed at the fibular head by:
- Prolonged leg crossing
- Prolonged squatting or kneeling
- Tight cast or brace
- Direct trauma to the outer knee
- Baker's cyst or other mass at the knee
Lumbar Disc Herniation (L4-L5)
A herniated disc at the L4-L5 level compresses the L5 nerve root, which contributes to dorsiflexion. This is one of the most common neurological causes of foot drop and is often accompanied by low back pain and sciatica.
Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
Narrowing of the lumbar spinal canal can compress the cauda equina and L4-L5 nerve roots, causing progressive foot drop β particularly with walking (neurogenic claudication).
Warning β seek emergency care if: Foot drop develops suddenly alongside bowel or bladder dysfunction, bilateral leg weakness, or saddle area numbness. This may indicate cauda equina syndrome β a surgical emergency.
When Conservative Care Can Help
Foot drop from peroneal nerve compression at the fibular head often responds well to conservative treatment, particularly when caught early. Chiropractic care addresses any contributing lumbar dysfunction, while physical therapy focuses on peroneal nerve gliding, ankle dorsiflexor strengthening, and gait retraining.
Foot drop from lumbar disc herniation may also resolve with aggressive conservative care β including Cox Flexion-Distraction, physical therapy, and core stabilization β if neurological deficit is not severe and progressive.
Our evaluation determines which category your foot drop falls into and provides a clear recommendation for conservative care or specialist referral when indicated.
Suffering from Foot Drop?
Our team at Pittsburgh Physical Medicine treats this condition with chiropractic care, physical therapy, and soft tissue techniques β under one roof in East Liberty, Pittsburgh.
Book an Appointment β