Oklahoma Foot and Ankle is a podiatric practice in Oklahoma City that specializes in diabetic foot management, wound care, and surgical treatment of foot and ankle conditions. The practice operates within the spectrum of local podiatry options that range from general foot care clinics to surgical specialists, positioning itself distinctly on the clinical and diabetic management end.
The practice provides diagnostic and treatment services for conditions affecting the foot and ankle, including bunions, hammertoes, heel pain, neuromas, and sports injuries. A significant portion of the practice volume centers on diabetic foot complications—a medical category that requires specific expertise because poor wound healing, reduced sensation, and infection risk demand proactive surveillance and intervention. This focus reflects both a clinical strength and a practical need in Oklahoma City, where diabetes prevalence rates track above the national average.
The practice also manages chronic wounds and ulcers, particularly those related to diabetes or circulatory disease. This tier of care typically requires coordination with primary care providers and endocrinologists, as foot wounds in diabetic patients often signal underlying glycemic or vascular control issues. Oklahoma Foot and Ankle operates as a referral destination for primary care doctors managing diabetic patients at risk for complications.
Services fall into three primary buckets: preventive and diagnostic care, conservative treatment, and surgical intervention.
Preventive visits include diabetic foot screening, nail care, callus and corn removal, and custom orthotic fabrication. Routine diabetic foot exams typically cost $100 to $150 per visit. Custom orthotics (shoe inserts designed to reduce pressure on at-risk areas) range from $300 to $800 per pair, depending on materials and customization level. Verify current pricing before scheduling, as orthotic costs fluctuate with material sourcing.
Conservative treatments for non-surgical conditions—such as physical therapy for plantar fasciitis, strapping for ankle stability, or topical wound care—generally fall between $150 and $300 per visit, with costs varying by complexity and time spent.
Surgical procedures are quoted individually. Common foot surgeries such as bunion correction or neuroma removal typically range from $2,500 to $5,000, depending on facility fees and anesthesia costs. Complex wound reconstruction or revision surgeries may exceed this range. Most practices offer payment plans or financing through third-party lenders; confirm availability with Oklahoma Foot and Ankle directly.
Insurance coverage varies widely. Medicare and most commercial plans cover diabetic foot care and medically necessary procedures, though diabetes screening visits and routine preventive care may be subject to copays or deductibles. Insurance acceptance should be verified at scheduling.
Oklahoma City has several podiatric practices. Community Health Centers and federally qualified health center clinics offer general foot care at lower copays ($20 to $50) but typically do not specialize in complex diabetic management or surgery. These suit patients seeking routine nail or callus care without comorbidities.
Other surgical podiatrists in the metro area—such as those affiliated with Mercy Hospital or OU Health—provide comparable surgical depth but may emphasize sports medicine or routine orthopedic conditions. Oklahoma Foot and Ankle's particular emphasis on diabetic foot disease and chronic wound care makes it the appropriate referral for patients with poorly healing ulcers, neuropathy-related complications, or complex vascular histories.
General orthopedic surgeons at larger hospital systems also treat foot and ankle problems but may defer diabetic-specific complications back to podiatry, as the specialty training in diabetes-related tissue changes is concentrated in podiatric medicine.
Oklahoma Foot and Ankle is the right fit for patients with diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2) who need proactive foot surveillance or have developed ulcers, infections, or neuropathic changes. It suits patients with chronic foot wounds that have not responded to routine care. It also serves patients requiring surgical correction of structural deformities when those problems are complicated by diabetes or vascular disease.
The practice is less appropriate for patients seeking cosmetic foot procedures (such as cosmetic nail surgery), patients with minor bunions or heel pain without comorbidities (who might be adequately served by community health centers or sports medicine clinics), or patients requiring only routine nail care in the absence of metabolic disease.
A new-patient appointment typically lasts 45 minutes to an hour. The provider will take a detailed history of foot symptoms, diabetes duration and control (HbA1c if available), prior foot injuries, footwear habits, and any previous surgeries. A physical exam includes assessment of skin integrity, sensation testing (using monofilament to detect neuropathy), evaluation of foot structure and alignment, and vascular examination (checking pulses and circulation signs). Imaging (X-rays) may be ordered if structural deformity or fracture is suspected.
If a wound or ulcer is present, the visit will include wound measurement, documentation of depth and drainage, and assessment of surrounding tissue. The provider will explain the clinical picture, outline a treatment plan, and discuss whether referral to vascular surgery, endocrinology, or infectious disease is needed. Many practices request that patients bring current medications and recent lab results, including HbA1c and glucose logs.
Oklahoma Foot and Ankle operates during standard business hours, typically Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with some practices offering limited Saturday availability. Confirm hours and the presence of same-day or next-day urgent appointments before scheduling, as wait times for routine appointments may extend 2 to 4 weeks during peak season.
Parking is typically available on-site or in shared medical office lots. The practice is accessible to patients using walkers, canes, or wheelchairs; request a ground-floor or accessible location if mobility is limited.
Insurance verification and prior authorization for surgical procedures should be completed before the visit. Some insurance plans require a referral from a primary care physician; confirm this requirement when scheduling.
Oklahoma Foot and Ankle fills a clinical gap in Oklahoma City by concentrating expertise on the diabetic patient population, whose foot complications often drive preventable amputations if unmanaged. For patients with diabetes and foot concerns, this practice offers both the surveillance and surgical capability needed to prevent progression.
