I think bodies are a very individual thing, so nobody else can say for sure how things will be for hour wife.
I have seen quite a number of women over the years comment that at 270-280 type weight they had still felt they could do anything if more slowly and with more fatigue.... but that by 330 or so they really found that pain, fatigue, or injury was limiting what they could do. That is purely anecdotal, and I'm sure other women have found "the line" at other weights. Still, it makes me think that the odds are reasonable that losing some weight might make a big difference for your wife.
All the same, to do as well as possible at her current weight I'd suggest very cushioned shoes, regular calf and thigh stretches (you can help with some of them), calf and thigh massage (you must help with those!), and as much as possible avoid standing for long on hard surfaces.
All of that is about cushioning shocks so that her joints don't get jolts as well as have to carry her weight.
One thing for cushioning, suggested to me when dealing with recurring planar fasciatis is wearing "Crocs" at home. Not the most elegant, but good support and cushioning.
As for stretching....google is you friend. Spend some time searching and you should get ideas.
Good luck to her -- pain is no fun at all :-( (as a fellow FA I know it will be hard to see her get smaller, if she does, but having her feel better should totally be worth it. A fatbody in motion >> a fatterbody stuck on the couch)
I have seen quite a number of women over the years comment that at 270-280 type weight they had still felt they could do anything if more slowly and with more fatigue.... but that by 330 or so they really found that pain, fatigue, or injury was limiting what they could do. That is purely anecdotal, and I'm sure other women have found "the line" at other weights. Still, it makes me think that the odds are reasonable that losing some weight might make a big difference for your wife.
All the same, to do as well as possible at her current weight I'd suggest very cushioned shoes, regular calf and thigh stretches (you can help with some of them), calf and thigh massage (you must help with those!), and as much as possible avoid standing for long on hard surfaces.
All of that is about cushioning shocks so that her joints don't get jolts as well as have to carry her weight.
One thing for cushioning, suggested to me when dealing with recurring planar fasciatis is wearing "Crocs" at home. Not the most elegant, but good support and cushioning.
As for stretching....google is you friend. Spend some time searching and you should get ideas.
Good luck to her -- pain is no fun at all :-( (as a fellow FA I know it will be hard to see her get smaller, if she does, but having her feel better should totally be worth it. A fatbody in motion >> a fatterbody stuck on the couch)
9 years