Wallace Foot and Ankle Center is a solo-physician podiatry practice in Oklahoma City that combines surgical intervention with sports-related foot and ankle care, distinguishing it from the general-practice podiatrists that dominate the metro area.
The practice operates as a medical clinic staffed by a board-certified podiatrist who handles both the routine nail care and orthotic fitting common to podiatry and more complex surgical cases. The provider structure—one physician rather than a group—means patients see the same clinician at each visit, a significant advantage for continuity in surgical follow-up or chronic management. Location and parking ease matter in Oklahoma City's car-dependent layout; confirm the address and lot details directly before your first visit.
Wallace Foot and Ankle Center offers bunion and hammertoe surgery, ankle arthroscopy, and fracture care alongside preventive services like diabetic foot screening, fungal toenail treatment, and custom orthotic fabrication. Surgical cases typically require separate consultation and procedure fees; podiatric surgery in the Oklahoma City market runs between $1,500 and $4,500 for straightforward bunion or hammertoe correction, though complex or revision procedures cost more. Non-surgical services such as routine nail care, plantar fasciitis strapping, and orthotics range from $75 to $300 depending on complexity. Many podiatrists in Oklahoma City operate on a cash-pay or deductible-only basis because insurance reimbursement for foot care is thin; confirm what Wallace accepts before booking. Verify current pricing directly, as podiatric surgery fees adjust with materials and facility costs.
Oklahoma City has conventional podiatrists scattered across midtown and the suburbs (practitioners such as those in group settings near Edmond and Midwest City), but most focus on preventive care, orthotics, and routine diabetic foot management rather than in-office surgery. A solo surgical podiatrist like the one at Wallace offers faster decision-making and direct continuity if you need surgery; group practices distribute surgical caseloads among multiple providers, which can mean longer waits for operative schedules and fewer familiar faces during recovery. Choose Wallace if you have a bunion, ankle instability, or sports-related foot injury that may require surgery and you want a single surgeon managing your care from start to finish. Choose a general-practice podiatrist in a group if you need only orthotics, routine care, or fungal treatment and convenience of multiple office locations matters more than surgical depth.
Wallace Foot and Ankle Center suits active adults with structural foot problems (bunions, hammertoes, ankle sprains, stress fractures) who prefer surgical options to steroid injections or prolonged conservative care, as well as patients with a history of foot surgery who need an experienced hand for revision work. It also serves athletes and runners dealing with overuse injuries. The practice is less ideal for patients seeking multiple convenient locations, walk-in urgent care for acute blisters or nail issues, or those who want to avoid surgery and prefer purely conservative management. Diabetic patients benefit from the screening services but should confirm that routine diabetic foot care is a priority; some surgical-focused practices deprioritize preventive screening.
Initial appointments at a surgical podiatry practice typically last 45 minutes to an hour. Expect a physical exam of the foot and ankle, imaging (X-rays are standard), and a detailed history of the problem, pain patterns, and functional goals. If surgery is a possibility, the clinician will discuss anatomy, surgical technique, recovery time, and costs. You will not have surgery decided during the first visit unless it is an acute fracture or severe instability; most surgical recommendations come after imaging review. Bring insurance cards, a list of current medications, and details of any prior foot surgeries or imaging you have had elsewhere.
Confirm office hours and parking details directly with the practice before your visit. Oklahoma City practices generally operate Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited or no Saturday hours. Most solo podiatry offices sit in medical plazas with adjacent or shared parking; allow 10 to 15 minutes for check-in at a first visit. The office should be accessible by standard commute routes in Oklahoma City proper; if you are coming from far north (Edmond area) or south (Norman), verify drive time to the location.
Wallace Foot and Ankle Center fills a gap in Oklahoma City's podiatric landscape for patients who need surgical expertise alongside routine foot care without the fragmentation of referral-based orthopedic surgery.
