New Northeast Naples location Coming Soon!

Bunion (Hallux Abducto Valgus) — Expert Care from Florida's Leading Podiatric Practice

Family Foot & Leg Center is Florida's premier multi-physician podiatric surgical group, founded and led by Dr. Kevin Lam, DPM — a board-certified foot and ankle surgeon and nationally and internationally recognized lecturer on bunion surgery. Our practice is headquartered at our flagship Downtown Naples, FL location, with nine offices spanning Southwest Florida, the Gulf Coast, and Sarasota. Our team of fellowship-trained, board-certified podiatric surgeons brings sub-specialist expertise to every patient evaluation, ensuring that the right procedure is selected by the right surgeon for the right patient — every time.

One of the most rewarding procedures our surgical team performs — and one where our outcomes consistently rank among the best in the nation — is the correction of the painful bunion. A bunion, medically termed Hallux Abducto Valgus — commonly called a bunion — is far more than a cosmetic bump. It represents a true three-dimensional structural deformity of the first metatarsal that, left untreated, progressively worsens, impairs gait, and limits quality of life. Patients typically present with pain inside or around dress shoes, swelling at the base of the great toe, redness from shoe friction, and in advanced cases, the great toe overlapping or underlapping the second toe.

Whether your bunion is mild and calls for a scarless keyhole correction, or severe and demands the definitive three-plane Lapiplasty fusion, our physicians have the training, the technology, and the surgical volume to deliver exceptional results. No other practice in Southwest Florida — and few in the nation — can offer the full spectrum of bunion procedures under one roof, performed by surgeons who actively teach these techniques to colleagues nationwide.

Root Causes

  • Abnormal foot mechanics — excessive pronation (flat foot)
  • Genetic predisposition to ligamentous laxity
  • Hypermobility of the first tarsometatarsal joint
  • Neuromuscular imbalance and tendon pull
  • Ill-fitting footwear (accelerates, does not cause)
  • Inflammatory arthritis (rheumatoid, psoriatic)

Common Symptoms

  • Painful bump on the inner border of the foot
  • Deviation of the great toe toward the 2nd toe
  • Redness, swelling, and warmth at the joint
  • Pain aggravated by closed-toe shoes
  • Corns or calluses between the 1st and 2nd toes
  • Occasional bursitis over the bunion prominence

An important point: bunions are not caused by shoes. Archaeological evidence from barefoot-wearing populations confirms that Hallux Abducto Valgus results from abnormal biomechanics passed through genetics. Shoes may worsen discomfort and accelerate progression, but the underlying deformity originates in the skeletal architecture of the foot.

The Three Zones of Bunion Correction

Selecting the correct surgical procedure is not guesswork — it is a precise science grounded in radiographic measurement and biomechanical analysis. The single most important measurement is the intermetatarsal angle, which describes the angular spread between the first and second metatarsal bones on a weight-bearing X-ray. This angle directly determines the operative zone of correction:

Dorsal view of foot with Hallux Abducto Valgus bunion deformity — anatomical illustration

Anatomical illustration of Hallux Abducto Valgus bunion deformity (dorsal view) with the three surgical correction zones overlaid directly on the first metatarsal bone. Zone selection is guided by the severity of the angle between the first and second metatarsal bones on weight-bearing X-ray. Illustration adapted for patient education at Family Foot & Leg Center.

Zone 1

Head Osteotomy

Intermetatarsal angle less than 13 degrees — mild to moderate deformity

A bone cut performed near the neck or head of the first metatarsal to shift and reposition the metatarsal head. Ideal for patients with low intermetatarsal angles, offering rapid recovery, minimal incisions, and excellent cosmetic results.

  • Austin (Chevron) Bunionectomy — the gold-standard V-shaped osteotomy at the metatarsal neck
  • Lam Minimally Invasive / Keyhole Bunionectomy — Dr. Lam's proprietary modification via a 5 mm incision; virtually no visible scar
  • Reverdin Osteotomy — corrects articular surface angle at the metatarsal head
  • Peabody Osteotomy — angulatory head procedure for plantarflexory component
Zone 2

Base Osteotomy

Intermetatarsal angle 13 to 18 degrees — moderate to severe deformity

When the intermetatarsal angle exceeds the corrective capacity of a head-level cut, a bone cut at the base of the metatarsal allows greater angular correction. The base location provides a longer lever arm for powerful realignment.

  • Closing Wedge Base Osteotomy — removes a wedge of bone to narrow the intermetatarsal angle; inherently stable
  • Opening Wedge Base Osteotomy — spreads the metatarsal base; may require bone graft or cage
Zone 3

Metatarsal-Cuneiform Fusion

Intermetatarsal angle greater than 16 degrees — moderate to severe or hypermobile deformity

For large intermetatarsal angles or cases complicated by hypermobility of the tarsometatarsal joint, a fusion of the first metatarsal-cuneiform joint is the most definitive correction — addressing the deformity at its root cause.

  • Lapidus Procedure — the classic first metatarsal-cuneiform arthrodesis
  • Lapiplasty® (3D Lapidus) — modern, precision-guided modification with titanium plating and earlier weight-bearing

Signature Procedure at Family Foot & Leg Center

Lapiplasty® — The 3D Bunion Correction

The Lapiplasty® Procedure is a modernized, instrumented evolution of the classic Lapidus first metatarsal-cuneiform joint fusion. Where a traditional head osteotomy only shifts the metatarsal in two dimensions, the Lapiplasty corrects all three planes of deformity simultaneously: the angular deviation (intermetatarsal angle), the rotational element (the toe pronation so commonly missed), and the sagittal/elevation plane. This is the same fundamental corrective principle first described by Dr. Paul Lapidus in 1934 — fusing the first metatarsal-cuneiform joint to eliminate hypermobility at the root of the problem — but executed with precision titanium cutting guides and low-profile fixation plates that allow most patients to begin weight-bearing in a boot within days rather than weeks.

🦴
Fusion Site
1st Metatarsal-Cuneiform joint — the hypermobile root of the deformity
📐
3-Plane Correction
Corrects the intermetatarsal angle, metatarsal rotation, and elevation — not just the surface bump
🔩
Titanium Fixation
Precision cutting jigs + low-profile titanium plates for stable fusion
👣
Earlier Weight-Bearing
Modern fixation allows many patients to walk in a boot within days
📉
Lower Recurrence
Fusion at the root eliminates the hypermobility that causes recurrence
🔬
Lapidus Lineage
A precision modification of the proven 1934 Lapidus arthrodesis technique

Note: Not every bunion requires a Lapiplasty. The procedure is specifically indicated for moderate-to-severe intermetatarsal angles, hypermobility of the first metatarsal-cuneiform joint, or cases where prior head-level surgery has failed. Dr. Lam's individualized evaluation determines the optimal approach for each patient's anatomy and lifestyle goals.

All Bunionectomy Procedures at Family Foot & Leg Center

Our surgical team is fluent in the full spectrum of bunion surgery. Below is a detailed overview of each procedure we offer, organized by operative zone.

1
Austin (Chevron) Bunionectomy
Zone 1 · Head Osteotomy · Mild-to-Moderate Bunion Deformity

The Austin bunionectomy — also called a Chevron osteotomy — is one of the most widely performed bunion procedures in the world. A precise V-shaped (chevron) cut is made in the metatarsal head, and the distal fragment is shifted laterally to narrow the intermetatarsal angle. A small screw or pin provides fixation. Recovery is typically 4–6 weeks in a surgical shoe. The Austin is the procedure of choice for patients with mild-to-moderate bunions (intermetatarsal angle under approximately 13 degrees) who have good bone stock and an intact first metatarsal-cuneiform joint without hypermobility.

2
Lam Minimally Invasive Keyhole Bunionectomy
Zone 1 · Head Osteotomy · 5 mm Incision · Dr. Kevin Lam's Signature Technique

Developed and refined by Dr. Kevin Lam right here in Naples, Florida — and now taught to surgeons nationally and internationally — the Lam Keyhole Bunionectomy is a percutaneous modification of the metatarsal head osteotomy performed through a single 5 mm incision. Using specialized burr instrumentation under fluoroscopic guidance, Dr. Lam sculpts and repositions the metatarsal head with precision, leaving virtually no visible scar. The technique combines the proven biomechanical principles of the Austin osteotomy with the aesthetic and recovery advantages of minimally invasive surgery. It is ideal for appropriate candidates seeking an expedited return to normal footwear and activity. To learn more, visit our Scarless Bunionectomy page.

3
Reverdin & Peabody Osteotomies
Zone 1 · Articular Surface Corrections · Head-Level Procedures

The Reverdin osteotomy adds a medial closing wedge to the metatarsal head to correct an elevated Hallux Abductus Angle — the angulation of the articular surface itself. The Peabody osteotomy addresses a plantarflexory or dorsiflexory component at the metatarsal head. These procedures are often combined with an Austin osteotomy to achieve multi-plane correction when the articular surface orientation contributes to the overall deformity. Selection is based on careful radiographic analysis of the distal metatarsal articular angle and metatarsal head morphology.

4
Base Wedge Osteotomies — Opening & Closing
Zone 2 · Proximal Osteotomy · Moderate-to-Severe Bunion Deformity (intermetatarsal angle 13 to 18 degrees)

When the intermetatarsal angle exceeds the corrective capacity of a head-level osteotomy, the surgeon moves the cut to the proximal base of the first metatarsal. A closing wedge osteotomy removes a small wedge of bone from the lateral base of the metatarsal, allowing the shaft to hinge medially and narrow the intermetatarsal angle. It is inherently stable and requires minimal to no bone graft. An opening wedge osteotomy instead spreads the medial base of the metatarsal with a structural bone graft or titanium wedge-cage, achieving correction without shortening the bone — a key advantage for patients with a relatively short first metatarsal. Plate and screw fixation is used in both variants. These procedures are powerful corrections for the moderate-to-severe deformity range but, unlike the Lapidus and Lapiplasty procedures, do not address underlying hypermobility of the first metatarsal-cuneiform joint — something Dr. Lam carefully evaluates in every candidate.

5
Lapidus Arthrodesis / Lapiplasty® — First Metatarsal-Cuneiform Fusion
Zone 3 · Metatarsal-Cuneiform Fusion · Moderate-to-Severe Bunion Deformity with Hypermobility

The Lapidus procedure, first described by Dr. Paul Lapidus in 1934, is the gold-standard surgical approach for moderate-to-severe bunions associated with hypermobility of the first tarsometatarsal (metatarsal-cuneiform) joint. By fusing this joint, the surgeon permanently eliminates the pathological motion that drives the deformity — addressing the root cause rather than the downstream consequence. The result is a mechanically stable, corrected first ray that resists recurrence.

The Lapiplasty® is the modern, Treace Medical-engineered iteration of this classic technique. It uses precision titanium surgical cutting guides to correct the bunion in all three spatial planes — frontal, transverse, and sagittal — followed by application of low-profile titanium locking plates across the metatarsal-cuneiform joint. This 3D reproducibility, combined with the structural stability of the fixation construct, allows many patients to bear weight in a boot within a few days of surgery, a significant improvement over the traditional 6–8 weeks of non-weight-bearing associated with older Lapidus fixation methods.

Dr. Kevin Lam and the Family Foot & Leg Center team are certified Lapiplasty surgeons with extensive experience in this procedure and lecture on its technique, indications, and outcomes at national and international podiatric surgical conferences.

Florida's Most Recognized Podiatric Surgical Practice

Family Foot & Leg Center is the most awarded podiatric group in Southwest Florida — and one of the most recognized in the nation. Our physicians include Dr. Kevin Lam, DPM, inventor of the Lam Keyhole Bunionectomy and a Lapiplasty-certified surgeon, alongside a team of fellowship-trained podiatric surgeons who collectively bring decades of high-volume surgical experience to patients across Florida. Multiple members of our team are invited national and international lecturers, presenting on bunion correction technique — including the Lapiplasty, minimally invasive osteotomy, and Lapidus fusion — to fellow surgeons at conferences in the United States and abroad. Our in-house fellowship program is the only one of its kind in Southwest Florida, ensuring that the care we deliver remains at the absolute cutting edge of the specialty.

Multi-Physician Surgical Group National Surgical Lecturers International Presenters Lapiplasty Certified Practice Lam Keyhole Bunionectomy — Invented Here Fellowship Training Program SWFL's Most Awarded Podiatric Practice HQ: Naples, FL · 9 Florida Locations

Conservative (Non-Surgical) Treatment First

Before surgery is ever discussed, Dr. Lam's approach follows a comprehensive conservative management protocol. Many patients with mild-to-moderate bunions achieve significant pain relief without going to the operating room.

  • Shoe Modification: Wider toe-box shoes, soft leather uppers, and rocker-sole modifications reduce bunion pressure.
  • Custom Functional Orthotics: Prescription foot orthoses control abnormal pronation, reducing the deforming forces on the first metatarsal and slowing progression.
  • Padding & Splinting: Silicone spacers and bunion pads reduce soft-tissue irritation; night splints may slow toe drift in early deformities.
  • Anti-Inflammatory Therapy: Oral anti-inflammatory medications or corticosteroid injections address acute bursitis and joint inflammation.
  • Physical Therapy: Strengthening intrinsic foot musculature, joint mobilization, and gait retraining at our on-site physical therapy program.

When conservative measures fail to provide adequate relief after a reasonable trial period, or when the deformity is severe and progressive, surgical correction is recommended.

Watch: Our Bunion Surgery Video Library

Our surgeons are committed to patient education. Dr. Lam and the Family Foot & Leg Center team have produced an extensive library of bunion surgery videos — covering procedure explanations, patient testimonials, surgical technique overviews, and post-operative guidance — available free on our YouTube channel. This playlist is one of the most comprehensive physician-authored bunion video resources available anywhere online.

Family Foot & Leg Center — Bunion Surgery Video Playlist

Florida's Most Experienced Bunion Surgical Team

What separates Family Foot & Leg Center from any single-physician podiatry office is the depth and breadth of our team. Our practice brings together multiple board-certified, fellowship-trained podiatric surgeons — each with sub-specialist expertise — under a unified clinical philosophy: choose the right procedure for the right patient, execute it with precision, and educate the next generation of surgeons along the way.

🏥
Multi-Physician Practice
A full team of board-certified podiatric surgeons — not a single-doctor office. When you see any physician at Family Foot and Leg Center, you have the collective experience of the entire practice behind your care plan.
🎓
Fellowship-Trained Surgeons
Our physicians hold post-residency fellowship training in foot and ankle reconstructive surgery — the highest level of surgical specialization in podiatric medicine. We also host our own fellowship program, training the next generation right here in Florida.
🌎
National & International Educators
Dr. Kevin Lam and our senior surgeons are invited lecturers at national podiatric surgical conferences and international symposia. We don't just perform these procedures — we teach them to surgeons across the country and around the world.
📍
9 Florida Locations
From our Naples, FL headquarters to Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Estero, Port Charlotte, Sarasota, and beyond — our network means expert bunion care is never far from where you live or work.
🏆
Florida's Most Awarded Practice
Family Foot & Leg Center has received more regional and national recognition than any other podiatric group in SWFL. Our awards reflect consistently superior patient outcomes, not just years in practice.
🔬
Full Surgical Spectrum
From the Lam 5 mm keyhole procedure to complex Lapiplasty 3D fusion, every bunion correction in the surgical literature is available at Family Foot and Leg Center — selected by your surgeon based on your anatomy, not by what the practice happens to offer.

Meet Our Full Surgical Team →

Both procedures fuse the first metatarsal-cuneiform joint, addressing the hypermobility at the root of many moderate-to-severe bunions. The Lapiplasty is a precision-engineered modification of the Lapidus that uses titanium surgical guides to reproducibly correct the bunion in all three spatial planes, followed by a low-profile titanium locking plate. This improved fixation stability allows most patients to begin weight-bearing within days rather than the 6–8 weeks of non-weight-bearing historically required after traditional Lapidus fixation.

Procedure selection is based on a comprehensive evaluation that includes standing weight-bearing X-rays (to measure the intermetatarsal angle, hallux abductus angle, and distal metatarsal articular angle), a clinical biomechanical exam, assessment of first metatarsal-cuneiform joint hypermobility, patient age, activity level, and lifestyle goals. Dr. Lam believes in shared decision-making and walks every patient through the rationale for their recommended approach before any surgical plan is finalized.

The Lam Keyhole Bunionectomy is Dr. Kevin Lam's proprietary refinement of percutaneous head osteotomy technique, designed to maximize correction through a single 5 mm incision under fluoroscopic guidance. The technique and instrumentation have been refined through years of direct surgical experience and are now taught by Dr. Lam to surgeons nationally and internationally. For qualifying patients with mild-to-moderate bunions, it provides excellent radiographic correction with minimal scarring and faster return to normal footwear compared to open procedures.

Recurrence risk depends significantly on the procedure chosen and whether the underlying cause of the deformity is addressed. Head osteotomies carry a higher recurrence rate if hypermobility of the first metatarsal-cuneiform joint is not recognized and treated. The Lapidus/Lapiplasty fusion, by eliminating that hypermobility permanently, has among the lowest recurrence rates of any bunion procedure — which is one reason Dr. Lam specifically evaluates metatarsal-cuneiform joint stability in every patient before recommending a surgical plan.

Yes. We accept most major insurance plans. Insurance coverage for bunion surgery typically requires documentation that conservative treatment has been attempted and failed, and that the deformity is functionally limiting. Our team will assist you in verifying your benefits and pre-authorizing the appropriate procedure. Please call (239) 430-3668 or visit our Insurance page for current plan details.

Family Foot & Leg Center has multiple locations across SWFL and Florida, including Downtown Naples, North Naples, Northeast Naples (Winchester Blvd), East Naples, Estero, Fort Myers Colonial, Cape Coral, Port Charlotte, and Sarasota. Call (239) 430-3668 or visit our Offices page to find the location nearest you.

Glossary of Key Terms

Bunion (Hallux Abducto Valgus)
Hallux Abducto Valgus — medial prominence at the first MTP joint with lateral deviation of the great toe.
Intermetatarsal Angle
The angular spread between the 1st and 2nd metatarsals on weight-bearing X-ray; the primary guide for procedure selection.
Osteotomy
A surgical bone cut designed to reposition a bone segment — essentially a controlled surgical fracture.
Arthrodesis (Fusion)
Surgical joining of two bones across a joint to permanently stabilize it; used in the Lapidus and Lapiplasty procedures.
Lapiplasty®
Treace Medical's precision-instrumented modification of the Lapidus first metatarsal-cuneiform fusion; corrects bunions in three planes.
Lapidus Procedure
The classic 1934 first metatarsal-cuneiform joint fusion, addressing hypermobility as the root cause of recurrent bunions.
Hypermobility
Excessive motion at the first tarsometatarsal joint — a key risk factor for bunion recurrence after non-fusion procedures.
Austin (Chevron) Osteotomy
V-shaped cut at the metatarsal head to laterally shift the distal fragment; the most common head-level bunionectomy.
Lam Keyhole Bunionectomy
Dr. Kevin Lam's proprietary percutaneous technique — full correction through a 5 mm incision, virtually scarless.
Metatarsal-Cuneiform Joint
The articulation between the base of the 1st metatarsal and the medial cuneiform — the joint fused in the Lapidus/Lapiplasty.
Orthotics
Custom prescription insoles molded to the patient's foot to control abnormal pronation and reduce deforming forces.
Pronation
Inward rolling motion of the foot; when excessive it flattens the arch and creates the mechanical load that drives bunion formation.

Family Foot & Leg Center — Serving All of Florida & Beyond

Our practice is headquartered in Naples, FL with nine offices spanning Southwest Florida and the Gulf Coast. Patients travel to us from Naples, Marco Island, Bonita Springs, Estero, Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Lehigh Acres, Port Charlotte, Punta Gorda, and Sarasota. Many patients also travel from across Florida and the United States specifically to receive bunion surgery from our nationally recognized team — particularly for the Lam Minimally Invasive Keyhole procedure and the Lapiplasty. Wherever you are in Florida, there is a Family Foot & Leg Center physician within reach.

Medical Disclaimer: The information on this page is provided for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Bunion surgery recommendations are individualized based on each patient's clinical and radiographic findings. Always consult a qualified podiatric physician before making any surgical decision. Lapiplasty® is a registered trademark of Treace Medical Concepts, Inc.

Why choose a podiatrist · SWFL expertise

Why See a Podiatrist for Gout in Naples, FL?

Gout most commonly affects the metatarsophalangeal joint of the big toe (podagra), the midfoot, ankle, and heel — all squarely within a podiatrist’s domain of expertise. At Family Foot & Leg Center, led by Dr. Kevin Lam, DPM, FACFAS, our board-certified podiatrists offer:

Foot-Focused Gout Evaluation

Expert clinical assessment of podagra, ankle gout, and midfoot flares — including joint examination, imaging, and discussion of arthrocentesis when indicated.

Intra-articular Steroid Injections

Direct corticosteroid injection into an acutely inflamed foot or ankle joint for rapid, targeted pain relief — particularly helpful when NSAIDs are contraindicated.

Same-Day Appointments

Gout flares can be incapacitating. Our 9 SWFL locations — from Naples to Sarasota — often offer same-day or next-day scheduling for acute joint pain.

Long-Term Monitoring

Chronic gout can damage joints and tendons over time. We monitor foot health, screen for tophi, and coordinate care with your internist or rheumatologist.

About Dr. Kevin Lam, DPM

Dr. Kevin Lam, DPM, FACFAS, DABLES, DABPS — Clinical Director of Family Foot & Leg Center — earned his Doctor of Podiatric Medicine with honors from Temple University and completed advanced surgical training at Mount Sinai Medical Center and Jackson Memorial Health in Miami. Recognized among America’s Top Podiatrists, Dr. Lam has served Southwest Florida patients since 2005 from Marco Island to Sarasota.

Frequently asked questions

Acute Gout FAQs for Naples & Southwest Florida Patients

Yes — this is one of the most common and consequential misunderstandings in gout diagnosis. Up to 30–40% of patients with a confirmed acute gout flare will have normal or even low serum uric acid at the time of the attack. The body's acute-phase inflammatory response can temporarily suppress circulating uric acid levels. A normal result during a flare does not rule out gout. For an accurate baseline, blood should be drawn at least 2 to 4 weeks after the flare has fully resolved.

Generally no. Initiating urate-lowering therapy (such as allopurinol or febuxostat) during an active flare can cause rapid fluctuations in uric acid levels that may prolong your current attack or trigger new flares. ULT is typically started 2 to 4 weeks after the flare resolves. However, if you are already on ULT when a flare begins, you should continue your current dose without adjustment — stopping abruptly can significantly worsen the attack.

Colchicine is generally considered the most effective single agent when started within the first 24 hours of symptom onset. NSAIDs such as indomethacin or naproxen are also highly effective and can be started immediately. For patients who cannot tolerate NSAIDs or colchicine, corticosteroids (oral, intramuscular, or intra-articular injection into the affected joint) are a reliable alternative. Seek care promptly — early treatment produces dramatically better outcomes.

The gold standard is joint fluid aspiration (arthrocentesis) followed by examination under polarized light microscopy to identify needle-shaped, negatively birefringent monosodium urate crystals. Clinical diagnosis based on the classic presentation (severe big toe pain, rapid onset, resolution within days) and elevated uric acid can be used, but the uric acid caveat above means lab results alone are never sufficient to definitively rule gout in or out.

Family Foot & Leg Center, led by Dr. Kevin Lam DPM, FACFAS, offers expert podiatric evaluation and treatment for acute gout across 9 Southwest Florida locations: Downtown Naples, North Naples, Northeast Naples, East Naples, Estero, Fort Myers (Colonial), Cape Coral, Port Charlotte, and Sarasota. Same-day and next-day appointments are frequently available. Book online at naplespodiatrist.com or call (239) 430-3668.

Serving Marco Island to Sarasota

You Don't Have to Keep Living in Pain

Take the first step. A comprehensive neuroma evaluation with Dr. Kevin Lam or one of the Family Foot & Leg Center physicians is the most important appointment you can make for your feet — and your quality of life.