Please click logo for updated website!


Shorecroft Private Clinic

Sandy Lane

Cannock

WS11 1RF


Ann Clark
51 Armitage Rd
Armitage
Rugeley


01543 624888


Friday 29 June 2012

Dermapod

   New clinic open

    Ann Clark
    51 Armitage Rd
    Armitage
    Rugeley
    Staffs
    WS15 4DB

   

Look as young as you feel

Are you unhappy with the appearance of your skin?
At  Dermapod, our aesthetician Fiona McGeough can, aswell as providing a full Podiatry service, also provide you with a number of cosmetic treatments and skin therapies to help your skin look and feel younger.
We are fully trained make-up artists as well as experienced medical practitioners and so can combine our expertise to provide you with cosmetic treatments of the highest order. 

Put the shine back in your skin:

  • Skin care
  • Skin peels
  • Dermal fillers
  • Wrinkle relaxing injections
  • Face, hand, neck and decolletage rejuvenation
  • Mesotherapy, the ultimate facial skin care treatment
We use Restylane, Teosyal, Juvederm Mene and Moy and Dermaceutics amongst other leading aesthetic skincare products,

Friday 3 February 2012

chiropodist cannock

Tel 01543 624888 for appointments. My Practice is based at Shorecroft Private Clinic, Sandy Lane, Cannock WS11 1RF.

A chiropodist is more commonly known as a foot doctor. Chiropodist is the English version of podiatrist, which is the American English version of “foot doctor.” . The word chiropodist literally means “medicine of the hand and foot” I, myself, have 10+ years NHS and private practice experience as a Podiatrist / Chiropodist. I am a degree qualified specialist in wound care, the treatment of patients with diabetes and have in depth knowledge of biomechanics.

I therefore play a key role in preventing and treating those aspects which affect the lower limb and provide a fully comprehensive foot health service, covering everything from routine footcare and verruccae to specialist areas such as biomechanics and orthotics, nail surgery and diabetic problems.

What do we offer?

Exclusive private clinic environment with views from treatment rooms across open countryside

Appointments can be scheduled to suit you, during the day or in the evening.

Hygiene is of the utmost importance, and all instruments are sterilised before use, in line with government requirements.

Selected foot care products can be purchased directly from the clinic. Gift vouchers are also available.

Monday 4 July 2011

Verruca

Things that affect the decision to treat verrucas

When a podiatrist or chiropodist assesses a verruca for treatment, they take several factors into consideration.

Single, multiple or mosaic:

Verrucas this can occur singularly, there can be many of them scattered over the foot and toes or they can spread from a single one giving a "mosaic" of verrucas. A podiatrist or chiropodist will assess how many and the pattern of verrucas to decide on the feasibility and appropriateness of treatment.

Pain:

Pain in a verruca on standing or wearing footwear, is a major factor into whether treatment is necessary. Whether a verruca is painful not depends largely on its position. Those on weight-bearing areas are often more painful. In addition, those overlying bony prominences are also likely to be more painful.

Age:

As the treatment of verrucas involves destruction of the verruca cells, treatments usually involve acids or extremes of heat or cold. In the young, it is essential that treatments are chosen that a more gentle so as to avoid any and you pain or distress.

Position:

The position of the verruca influences what treatment is given, and how aggressive that treatment is. Verrucas on the thickened skin on the sole of the foot, particularly the weight-bearing areas, can tolerate more aggressive treatment and require stronger methods.


Conversely, those on the thinner skin on the upper foot require more gentle and less aggressive treatment to achieve the same results.

Skin condition:

A chiropodist podiatrist will assess the skin condition before choosing a treatment regime. In particular, dry skins need less aggressive treatments and so podiatrist and chiropodists are careful when treating people with dry skin.

General health:

The general health of the patient is assessed carefully. Patients who have diabetes or poor blood supply to their feet require special attention. If the blood supply is particularly at risk, one may opt for a homoeopathic or very an aggressive treatments. As with all medical care, it is essential not to cause harm.


Dry Needling 


Dry needling is an innovative and highly effective treatment for stubborn  verrucae. Most treatments, like freezing, burning, or chemical caustics work by creating a thermal or chemical burn in and around the verruca. This increases the chance of the verruca resolving by creating lots of inflammation and swelling around the area.

Dry needling is different. By disrupting each individual papilli in the verruca and creating a portal from the viral tissue to the adipose tissue, It allows the immune system to attack the lesion directly. In this way treating a single lesion  can cause spontaneous remission in any / all satellite lesions. It has been reported to be highly effective, even for longstanding lesions of ten years or more and has been effective when other treatments have failed.

Unlike treatments like caustics, which can need dozens of applications to be effective (involving considerable inconvenience and cost), dry needling only requires one, very occasionally two, applications making ideal for busy people. It also requires no bulky dressing to be left on, you can go swimming the next day if you like!

It is carried out painlessly under local anesthetic and most people report only minor soreness for a few days.

Dry Needling has been around for 40 years. It was first described in a medical journal in America in 1969 and is used routinely on that side of the Atlantic. It has only recently crossed the water, which is why very few Podiatrists offer it.

If you have a verruca you had given up on ever getting rid of, don't waste any more money at the chemist! Call for an assessment appointment now and sort it out once and for all!

Nail Surgery

Ingrown toenails are often caused by injury or poor nail cutting. They are often associated with increased cross sectional curvature (involution) of the nail plate, which causes the nail edges to press into the flesh more easily. Very often the edge of the nail can be removed and prevented from regrowing by excising the section of tissue containing the nail matrix.
Prior to surgery
On the morning before the procedure you can eat and drink normally unless you are having sedation or a general anaesthetic (refer to separate advice sheet), as local anaesthetics have no effect on your digestive system. If you have been ill or prescribed any new medication from a Doctor or Dentist following your initial assessment at the Hospital, please inform a member of staff on the day you attend for surgery.
It will be necessary to arrange for a lift home following the procedure as it is not advisable to drive for the rest of the day. Also bring a pair of sandals or slippers to accommodate the large dressing that you will have on your toe for the first 3 - 5 days.
Following the surgery
Directly following the surgery it is important to get home and be able to rest. To reduce discomfort you should keep your leg raised and take it easy for the rest of the day. Should you experience discomfort you can take your usual headache tablet as directed on the packet, and if persistent a bag of frozen peas rapped in a towel can be place over the ankle for 10 minutes per hour.
It is also important to keep the dressing dry until you attend for your first re-dressing. Once this has been carried out you will be taught how to care for your toe until healing has completed. However you will not be discharged from our care until we are happy that the area is fully healed and you are happy with the result.

Saturday 14 August 2010

Fungal Nail Infections

About 3 in 100 people in the UK will have a fungal nail infection at some stage of their life. Toenails are more commonly affected than fingernails. It is more common in people over 55, and in younger people who share communal showers, such as swimmers or athletes. The nails may become discoloured, thickened, brittle, painful or crumbly.

Nail issues may not always be caused by a fungal infection, there are many other reasons why nails may change in their appearance.

It is best practice to see Cannock Chiropodist and Podiatrist Fiona McGeough for information and treatment.

Wednesday 3 February 2010

Orthotics and Biomechanics

This is a highly specialised service carried out by Fiona McGeough BSc Hons HPC Reg MChS Cannock Chiropodist / Podiatrist.

The session takes around 1 hour and involves a detailed gait analysis where you are recorded from both sides front and back, statically and dynamically and the results are then analysed . This also involves heel lift timing and knee flexion symetry.

If it is decided that you require orthotics, a  non-weight bearing plaster of paris cast  will be taken of your feet. This is then what  the Sub-4 lab uses to make your orthoses (insoles/orthotics) in the laboratory. All of the Sub-4 staff use the most traditional and latest techniques (including CADCAM) in the cast preparation and orthotic building.

These special one off orthoses (insoles/orthotics) go inside your daily and sports footwear,  they then help to cure your pain/ injury by correcting any biomechanical dysfunction and making you as efficient as possible. They can last as long as ten years if looked after. You are given thorough instructions with orthoses on how to use them in the first few days as you adapt to them.

Importantly, 9 times out of 10, you will also be given an exercise prescription to help treat the root of the problem.

It has been found that 95% of practitioners only treat the symptoms which is great but it only moves the problem some where else shortly after.

All repetitive injuries are biomechanical in origin, so it makes sense to look at function and gait, i.e. the way you walk and run.

Prescription orthoses may be suitable for most types of foot/leg pain/injury.....book your Biomechanical Assessment and find out -The assessment consultations  are carried out by Fiona McGeough, MChS, SRCh. HPC Registered. Cannock Chiropodist / Podiatrist. Call now to book a one on one consultation with Sports Biomechanics Specilaist Fiona McGeough - 01543 422558

http://www.bizwiki.co.uk/chiropodists/1572295/fiona-mcgeough-bsc-hons-hpc-reg-mchs.htm
NAIL FUNGUS LASER TREATMENT

Thursday 19 November 2009

Diabetes and the foot

Foot care amongst people with diabetes is incredibly important. Diabetes can affect the nerves and the circulation in the feet and lower limbs. Any cuts,grazes, corns, verrucae or other lesions can represent a serious risk: they may heal extremely slowly and need rigorous treatment to cure. The site may easily become infected, Foot ulcers affect as many as 1 out of every 10 diabetes sufferers, during the entirety of their condition. You should see an HPC Registered Cannock Chiropodist/ Podiatrist promptly with any problems and yearly for diabetic foot screening. I am currently producing my last paper towards postgraduate study -  Warwick University  Medical School -  Certificate in Diabetes Care.