The Bunion Cure is built around focused minimally invasive forefoot surgery. Instead of trying to be a general podiatry office for every foot problem, our day-to-day clinical focus is bunions, hammertoes, tailor’s bunions, heel spurs, revisions, and related forefoot correction.
Example results shown for education. Individual results vary.
The Bunion Cure is different because the practice is focused on minimally invasive forefoot correction instead of general podiatry. That focus shapes the consultation, procedure planning, recovery instructions, follow-up systems, and patient education around bunions, hammertoes, tailor’s bunions, heel spurs, and related forefoot problems.
Our primary focus is minimally invasive forefoot correction. That repetition matters because patient education, procedure planning, recovery guidance, and follow-up care all become more refined.
Because these procedures are central to the practice, the team is used to guiding patients through common questions, unusual anatomy, severe deformities, and post-op concerns.
Our procedures are planned around protected walking and practical recovery, rather than assuming every patient can stop life for a prolonged non-weight-bearing recovery.
Many podiatry offices treat a broad mix of ingrown nails, wounds, diabetic foot care, trauma, routine nail care, sports injuries, and general foot pain. Those services can be valuable, but that is not the center of what The Bunion Cure is built around.
Our main clinical focus is forefoot deformity correction through minimally invasive techniques. That includes bunions, hammertoes, tailor’s bunions, heel spurs, bone spurs, and revision situations when minimally invasive correction is appropriate.
Patients hear the same core questions every day: walking, shoes, swelling, pins, hardware, pain, travel, insurance, and realistic results.
Procedure-day flow, post-op instructions, dressing care, follow-up timing, and recovery checkpoints are built around these specific procedures.
High repetition helps the team recognize which deformities are straightforward, which are severe, and which need more nuanced planning.
Because recovery is predictable for many patients, the team can guide swelling, activity, shoe transition, travel, and concerns more confidently.
“Minimally invasive” is a broad phrase. At The Bunion Cure, it means a specific way of evaluating the whole forefoot, choosing the appropriate correction, limiting soft-tissue disruption, and building the recovery plan around protected walking whenever possible.
For bunions, that may include minimally invasive bunionectomy or another minimally invasive bunion procedure depending on the foot. For hammertoes, it means no screws, plates, pins, implants, or hardware, with careful bandaging to hold the toes stable while they heal. For combined deformities, it may mean correcting the bunion and hammertoes together so the forefoot functions as a whole.
Some patients come to The Bunion Cure after being told their bunion, hammertoe, or revision problem is too severe for a small-incision approach. Not every foot is the same, and no website can promise the right answer without an exam and X-rays. But severe deformity does not automatically mean a patient is out of options.
Dr. Sullivan commonly evaluates severe bunions, severe hammertoes, combined deformities, retained hardware, and revision situations. In many cases, minimally invasive correction can still create meaningful improvement while reducing scar tissue, stiffness, and disruption compared with more traditional open approaches.
The goal is not simply to make a smaller scar. The goal is to correct the deformity in a way that respects the soft tissue, helps patients stay mobile, and makes recovery easier to manage for real people with real lives.
That is why the consultation focuses on symptoms, activity limits, shoe irritation, progression, X-rays, medical history, and what result is realistic for your foot.
Schedule a consultation so Dr. Sullivan and the medical team can review your symptoms, X-rays, goals, and whether minimally invasive correction is appropriate.
Clinical content reviewed and approved by Dr. Jordan Sullivan on June 10, 2026. Individual results vary. The exact procedure and recovery plan depend on in-person evaluation, X-rays, health history, and patient goals.