Exchange Avenue Foot Clinic is a single-provider podiatry practice in northwest Oklahoma City specializing in diabetic foot management, wound care, and custom orthotic fabrication. The clinic serves patients seeking conservative treatment before considering surgery, and patients already managing chronic foot conditions with medication or previous intervention.
The clinic operates as a general podiatry office with a stated focus on non-surgical management of common foot and ankle complaints. The practice does not perform in-office surgery but refers complex cases (bunions, hammertoes, fractures requiring reduction) to surgical specialists. This makes it a fit for patients with uncomplicated plantar fasciitis, fungal nails, corns, calluses, flat feet, and diabetic foot ulcers or neuropathy. The Exchange Avenue location sits in a low-traffic commercial area northwest of downtown, distinct from larger sports medicine clinics or university-affiliated podiatry services in the metro area.
The clinic offers routine foot evaluations, gait analysis, custom orthotic molding, removal of corns and calluses, fungal nail treatment, and wound assessment for diabetic patients. Nail debridement and conservative callus removal typically cost between $40 and $100 per visit, depending on severity and whether orthotics are fabricated. Custom orthotics range from $300 to $800, with variations based on materials and whether they treat a single problem (arch support) or multiple zones. Diabetic wound checks are usually covered by Medicare and most commercial insurance at standard office-visit copays ($20 to $50), though the clinic should be contacted directly for specific fee schedules and uninsured pricing.
Exchange Avenue occupies a narrow niche between retail orthotic vendors and hospital-affiliated sports podiatry. Walmart and CVS in-store orthotic sections offer generic arch supports for $20 to $60, but these are not custom-molded and do not address specific gait abnormalities. Mid-Continent Podiatry Group, a larger multi-provider practice, offers the same services plus on-site surgery, making it better for patients who have failed conservative care and need bunion removal or other procedures. OU Health's sports podiatry division (associated with the university's athletic medicine programs) emphasizes biomechanics and athletic injury and attracts recreational runners; Exchange Avenue does not market itself this way. For simple preventive care or basic orthotic purchase, a retail option is cheaper. For a single provider you'll see repeatedly, or if you have diabetes and require frequent wound checks, Exchange Avenue's scale and focus suit that need.
This practice is best for patients with non-surgical foot complaints, those managing diabetes-related foot risks, and patients seeking custom orthotics without the scheduling delays of large clinics. Patients uncomfortable with referral to surgery if conservative care fails should know that referral is part of the plan. Those who prefer to see a female podiatrist may want to confirm availability before scheduling, as single-provider practices limit choice. Patients seeking same-day nail care or walk-in wound checks should confirm the clinic's appointment availability; many podiatry offices require advance booking.
A first visit typically includes a lower-leg and foot examination, assessment of foot structure and arch height, gait observation (often barefoot walking or in minimal footwear), and discussion of pain location and daily activity. If orthotics are indicated, the provider will mold a custom insole during that visit or schedule a separate fitting. Diabetic patients will have wound photographs documented (if applicable) and a neuropathy screening using a monofilament test. The appointment usually runs 30 to 45 minutes. Bring your insurance card and a list of any current foot or ankle medications.
Exchange Avenue Foot Clinic operates Monday through Friday, with hours typically 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., though you should call ahead to confirm specific days and any seasonal closures. The clinic is located on Exchange Avenue northwest of NW 23rd Street. Street parking is available adjacent to the building. Public transit (METRO bus routes) serves the area but not with high frequency; personal vehicle transport is more practical. Allow 15 minutes for parking and check-in.
Exchange Avenue fills a practical role for Oklahoma City patients who need ongoing orthotic management or diabetic foot monitoring in a lower-volume setting where you'll develop continuity with one provider.
