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    High Heels, High Danger?

    Fashionistas of the world, it's true.

    The pain you feel while walking in your 6-inch Louboutins and sky-high Prada pumps is  a symptom of  the real damage  high heels may be doing to your body, new  research finds.

    "The structure of the foot is just not meant to be crammed in the shoe that way," Dr. Braxton Little, a podiatrist at the UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica, Calif., told ABC News.  "It just puts the body in a very unnatural position."

    PHOTOS: Extreme High Heels

    A first-of-its-kind study published last week in the The Journal of Applied Physiology found that wearing high heels could lead to permanent damage of the calf muscles by increasing the mechanical strain on the muscles  and shortening the muscles' fibers, all thanks to the flexed, toes-pointed position of the feet that remains even after you kick off those stilettoes.

    The Australian study looked at nine women, who  ranged  in age from  late teens to early 30s, and had worn high heels for at least 40 hours per week for the past two years.

    Researchers, as reported in the New York Times, used ultrasound probes, electrodes and motion-capture markers to monitor the women as they walked, barefoot and then in heels, along a 26-foot-long walkway.

    The findings suggest  that the women in high heels walked with "shorter, more forceful strides" and engaged their muscles as opposed to their tendons, leaving them vulnerable to injury and prone to muscle fatigue, the Times reported.

    "We think that the large muscle strains that occur when walking in heels may ultimately increase the likelihood of strain injuries," Dr. Neil Cronin, one of the study's lead researchers, told the Times.

    The damage for heel- wearers is not eased by switching to sneakers or flats, according to the study, because that only increases the risk of injury by forcing the foot into a new position.

    The repeated wearing of high heels is widely known to increase the risk of   such conditions as osteoarthritis, hammer toes, bunions and corns, but doctors said the damage could be happening in areas beyond the legs, such as the back, and in areas and ways not immediately evident, such as the heart.

    "Inflammation inside your body can happen anywhere.  It can happen from wearing shoes," Little, who was not involved in the Australian study, told ABC News.  "When we put your foot into a shoe, it has nowhere to go but to bind the toes."

    Homing in on the point, researchers in England last week also released a study, published in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases Journal, that found wearing high heels could lead to flat feet, as it can weaken the tendons that support the arch of the foot, leading it to fall, which causes pain and can make it difficult to walk.

    Faced with these findings, what is a high-heel lover to do?

    Both  Cronin, author of the Australian study, and UCLA's Little said that women do not have to give up high heels completely.  Moderation is the key.

    "Wear high heels once or twice a week ... and try to remove the heels whenever possible, such as when you're sitting at your desk,"   Cronin told the Times.

    Similarly, Little recommends taking off the heels while walking to work and driving a car.

    ABC News' Nick Watt, Cathy Becker and Daisha Riley contributed to this report.

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    11 comments

    • p  •  3 mths ago
      honestly? if a woman truly believes she looks fabulous in 6inch heels, nobody will be able to tell her any different. sure she can pay for it when she is my age but up til then? she will just keep on wearing them if they are out there and i just laugh when i see the youngins walking around in them. warnings for future foot issues? hell, they don't care.
    • Sinner's Swing!  •  3 mths ago
      But high heels make my #$%$ look good..............
    • Jen  •  3 mths ago
      At 58, I now have arthritis in the balls and heels of both feet, along with both knees. My years of wearing high heels have exasperated my condition. Now I wear SAS lace up shoes, going from a B width to a DDD width, and my feet are finally happy. At 5'11" I really didn't need anymore heighth, but was a slave to the current styles. I would have worn flats if I had known what pain my lovely high heels were going to cause me down the road.
    • Captain Spaulding  •  Tafton, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      Looks good on #$%$
    • marine  •  Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      GIVE THIS ONE TO THE HIGHER UPS.
    • Joan Q  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      Obviously, women who wear these real high heels, don't realize they're killing themselves and making the shoe designers rich. Some one tell me, what are those shoes for? Is it to show you look cute? Show you have good taste? Show your femininity? Attract a man? What?
      • John 3 mths ago
        Joan,
        There is nothing better to a leg man than high heels on women....and women know that. You don't have to be a leg man to appreciate it, though.
      • Mike 3 mths ago
        I could think of worse things that really could kill you! Long live high heels!
    • Randall  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      Just like us men, women are going to dress the way they want. A few of us men [who can afford it, that is] like to buy and wear designer clothing. Some women like to do the same. So what's the point here? Because I love my sisters, especially those of my church family.
      Therefore, I would hope and pray that eventually those who like "high heels" will change their minds and wear shoes more befitting their podiatric health . . . which, believe it or not, does have an effect on the overall comfort of the rest of the body. Shucks, I'm a man, and I too can tell the difference in how I feel if the shoes I wear don't fit well. Long story, short, if they aren't comfortable on my feet when trying them on, I simply don't buy them.
    • marine  •  Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      THAT'S TO HIGH FOR ME
    • Orlando Olivera  •  3 mths ago
      He looks great in high heels, I wonder what else he wears secretly.
    • Tyler  •  3 mths ago
      High heels should be renamed h heels for h00kr heels
    • Karen S  •  Dublin, Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      I can barely walk in 2-3" so I can't get my feet in these things. Although, I wish I could.