Tuesday, August 31, 2004

KUTV: Can Shoes Relieve Foot and Leg Pain?

KUTV: Can Shoes Relieve Foot and Leg Pain?It's an unusual pair of footwear but some swear it's making a difference with certain kinds of foot and leg pain. Debbie Worthen explains in this Healthy Living report.

Ok so they're not a fashion statement but loyal customers of Z-Shoes say it's a small price to pay for relief they feel from things like foot, leg and back pain.

Lara Kjersted is the owner and chef at the Singing Cricket restaurant. She's on her feet all day and says these shoes have helped relieve pain she's had for years.

“I'm there 10-12 hours cooking and supervising. These shoes do wonders. I don’t have ankle, knee and hip problems,” said Lara.

The coil spring is mounted to a solid orthodic that from the ball of your foot to the heel, your foot does not flex or bend which helps eliminate Planter Facitis or heel spurs and reduces skeletal impact by 50-percent.

Retailers say Z-Shoes won't fix problems, but can help people feel better and say many experience immediate relief.

“Most people know within a minute of putting the shoe on if it's going to make a difference for them,” said Richard Redlein, owner Z-Best pain relief footwear.


Z-Best Ad

Z-BestTestimonials

I am a manager in a Super Market and I am on my feet 8 to 10 hours a day. I use to come home and soak my feet because of the pain. I started wearing Z-Coil shoes several months ago and found they made a change in how my feet have felt after being on them all day. I no longer have to soak my feet at night when I get home. My feet feel better and I don't have the pain. I recommend anyone with pain or no pain in their feet to try Z-Coil and see if they make their feet feel better.

Ray E. Atencio
Assistant Manager Dans Supermarket
Park City, Utah

Saturday, August 28, 2004

Your Health Matters Today - Chattanooga, TN - Pain Relief Footwear - Feet & Footz

Your Health Matters Today - Chattanooga, TN - Pain Relief Footwear - Feet & Footz: "Edwin and Carolyn Roberts are the owners of "Feet & Footz". They have lived in Chattanooga, TN most of their lives and decided to delay their retirement to bring this product to the Chattanooga area.

Carolyn has followed the development of this footwear for the past 10 years.

She was on assignment in Albuquerque and watched newspaper and TV segments on Al's (Al Gallegos) design and development of the footwear.

In October, 2002, Edwin and Carolyn were in Albuquerque at the Balloon Fiesta and both purchased footwear. Upon returning home they were asked many questions about their footwear. They also learned that many people suffer with some type of foot, back or leg pain and would 'Iove' to find a solution to their pain and discomfort.

Seeing the need for this product, teamed with the feet that Tennessee has one of the highest rates of people on prescription drugs, high rates for stroke and diabetes and lots of wonderful places to walk. they made the decision to open their store. The location in Red Bank was chosen because it has a large, level parking lot and is on a main thoroughfare with a reasonable flow of traffic. "



Friday, August 27, 2004

Z-CoiL Customer Newsletter - Summer 2004

Z-CoiL Customer Newsletter The Z-CoiL Customer Newsletter, a full color quarterly publication, is now available at A Step Above Footwear or it can be downloaded from the Z-CoiL web site.



Z-CoiL Springs Into Action

Spring Into Action allows us to share in the triumph of those people who have tried Z-CoiLs, and found their lives changed for the better. Many of the happiest Z-CoiL customers are people who work in retail stores, restaurants, warehouses and hospitals, who must spend hours every day on their feet, often on concrete floors.

“Z-CoiL Footwear has literally changed my life,” declares Claudia McIntosh, a nurse in Albuquerque, New Mexico. “I suffered from severe foot pain from years of hard hospital floors and extremely long hours. The Z-CoiLs have taken all of my pain away and I have tons more energy on a daily basis. I have made such a stir in the hospital where I work that over half of the nursing staff now use Z-CoiLs.”

(Click on title to read more)

Sunday, August 22, 2004

A Step Above Footwear Testimonial: I zeroed in on pain relief

Only 20 minutes into the Health and Harmony fair, and already my feet were hurting enough to make me wonder how I could make the rest of the day.

Walking by a booth I saw really funny looking shoes. "What are these for?" I asked. I zeroed in on about the 4th word, pain relief, now they had my full attention.

About 5 minutes later the funny shoes were on my feet. Not only the foot pain was gone but so was the back pain from a car accident that persisted for the last 4 years. Completely, instantly, gone.

I now own 6 pairs of the "funny shoes" and have put back into my life things like hiking, gallery hopping and a wide range of choices in my life that I did not have before Z-Coils.

Colleen
Santa Rosa CA

Saturday, August 21, 2004

Big brand shoes get a run for their money

Z-CoiL breaking new ground with its pain-free footwear


By Dan Thanh Dang
Sun Staff
Copyright © 2004, The Baltimore Sun
July 31, 2004


If Al Gallegos has his way, every man, woman and child will one day walk with a spring in their steps and a satisfied smile on their faces.


The spring will come attached to the heel of a strange, space age-looking shoe Gallegos wants to sell you. And the smile, well, that will come once you put on the shoe, says the 73-year-old inventor of the Z-CoiL line of pain-relief footwear.


Z-CoiLs first hit the shelves four years ago in New Mexico, and since then, the shoes have become something of a cult item. They're sold only through authorized dealers and are targeted toward people with painful leg, foot and back problems. About 350,000 pairs of the shoes have been sold to date, a relative drop in the footwear market.


So worry not, Reebok and Nike. At least for now.

But at last count, there were 227 Z-CoiL dealers in 39 states, Puerto Rico, Mexico and Canada, and the company's goal is to open 1,000 stores. The shoes have been featured in major publications, studied by two research laboratories and recommended by the Arthritis Foundation's magazine.

"It's a dream come true after such a long time and so much work," says Gallegos, who flew in from Albuquerque this week to attend the grand opening of the Coil Heaven store in Laurel today. "We knew our product was good, but we didn't think people would cotton to it the way that they have. When I visit these stores, people hug me up and tell me what a huge difference my shoes have made in their lives. I'm constantly surprised when I'm traveling around and I see people wearing them.

"I just want to get a shoe on the next person and make them feel good," says Gallegos, a distance runner who claims to sprint a 5 1/2 -minute mile in his Z-CoiLs.

To make it simple for Z-CoiL newbies:

  • Yes. They are funny-looking. But they come in different styles including sandals, sneakers, hiking boots, clogs or work boots.
  • Yes. They do make you bounce. Like walking on a trampoline.
  • No. They can't cover the coil to make the shoe prettier. Well, yes, they can. (There is a closed-heel boot, with a steel toe, for construction workers who don't want the steel spring to accidentally catch the rung of a ladder.) Covering the coil lessens its ability to compress and expand, allowing it to absorb the impact on your body as you walk, run or hike.
  • No. They don't do any advertising. Z-CoiLs are sold by word-of-mouth, and dealers will often go to hospital and nursing fairs to demonstrate the shoes for potential customers.
  • Yes. They are a bit pricey, between $139.95 to $179.95 depending on the style.
    But, really, what price, pain? Or rather, to be pain-free?

An estimated 75 percent of Americans will experience foot health problems of varying degrees of severity at one time or another in their lives, according to the American Podiatric Medical Association. Gallegos and Z-CoiL devotees say the footwear helps people suffering from such ailments as heel spurs and plantar fasciitis, a painful inflammation to the bottom of the foot.

Additionally, Gallegos says, sufferers of lower back pain, arthritis and knee problems have also found relief with the shoe.


He himself has suffered from various foot, knee and back pains and first thought of using springs in shoes while out running his typical seven miles one day. His thought was that every car, from economy to luxury vehicles, uses shock absorbers to take a beating while passengers sit smoothly in their seats. Why not use the same simple technology in footwear?


What he came up with was a 3-inch conical coil steel spring, a rigid orthotic mold to support the arch and plenty of cushioning to surround the foot. The longtime shoe store owner then had a local butcher cut the soles of some shoes and then glued the coil to the heel.


The end product looked like one of Wile E. Coyote's harebrained schemes to catch the elusive Road Runner.


Manufacturers and the shoe industry reacted to it in similar fashion. Some laughed. Some derided the effort. Many doubted its success. It took Gallegos five years to get a patent for the idea and then another couple years, with his son, Andres, to find a manufacturer in Korea to make the shoes.


Last year, the privately held company posted net record sales of $6.3 million and net income of $1.2 million. After the opening in Laurel, Gallegos is heading north to scout store space in New York.


"Man, wouldn't it be neat to put one there?" Gallegos says. "It's really taking off. They make people feel good."


But don't take Gallegos' word for it. Two independent studies funded by grants that Gallegos won from the U.S. Department of Energy - one by the Los Alamos National Laboratory Project and a second by the Sandia National Laboratories - seem to support his claims.


Research indicated, according to Los Alamos' study, that the "design of the Recoil shoe may be an improvement over that of the typical elastomer cushioned running shoe. The initial impact forces appear to be less abrupt in the Recoil shoes, resulting in a reduction of the jarring effect to the foot and the lower leg of a runner as the heel impacts the ground." The Los Alamos study concluded that Z-CoiLs return energy to the foot.


The Sandia study showed that the Z-CoiL also absorbed 50 percent of the force placed on it when compared to a popular name-brand cushioned shoe.


Deborah Brackens, a nurse for 26 years, says the shoe has eased her aches and pains.
"I have osteoarthritis," says Brackens, an administrator at Prince George's Hospital Center who owns a pair of Z-CoiL clogs. "If you're a nurse, you're walking on concrete floor or linoleum all day. By the end of the day, your feet are tired and you're tired. For me, they lessen the pain on my hips. If you're trying to preserve your bones and joints, these are great."


It might be awhile before the word gets out. Z-CoiL has no advertising budget and relies mainly on word-of-mouth. A spokeswoman at the giant shoe retailer Nike Inc. said they've never heard of Z-CoiLs.


That's fine by Gallegos and company. His shoes are popular among police officers, nurses, retailers and real estate agents - anyone who works on their feet - and there are plenty of those kind of customers around. In the area, you can find the footwear on members of the U.S. Capitol Police and even a naval officer in the White House communications department, according to the new Laurel Z-CoiL store.


Rumor has it, there might be a version for golf enthusiasts coming down the road, too.
Gallegos, ever the dreamer, is also working with Sandia labs to develop a Z-CoiL that can harvest the energy from the spring action to heat your boots, run lights or maybe even power a cell phone as you hike up the side of a mountain. With all that imagination at work, you would think they'd be able to design a more handsome shoe.


"If you're in enough pain, you'll try anything no matter what they look like," says Kathryn Ottman, an artist who fell head over heels for Z-CoiLs when she tried them for the first time in March. She now owns six pair and runs CoiL Heaven, 7417 Van Dusen Road, in Laurel. "Besides, we're not in the fashion industry. We're in the pain relief industry."

Friday, August 20, 2004

Study finds common knee surgery no better than placebo

Study finds common knee surgery no better than placeboHOUSTON--(July 10, 2002)--Patients with osteoarthritis of the knee who underwent placebo arthroscopic surgery were just as likely to report pain relief as those who received the real procedure, according to a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and Baylor College of Medicine study published in the July 11 New England Journal of Medicine.
The researchers say their results challenge the usefulness of one of the most common surgical procedures performed for osteoarthritis of the knee.

"The fact that the effectiveness of arthroscopic lavage or debridement in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee is no greater than that of placebo surgery makes us question whether the dollars spent on these procedures might not be put to better use," said lead investigator Dr. Nelda P. Wray, a health services researcher at the Houston VA Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

In the study, 180 patients with knee pain were randomized into three groups. One group received debridement, in which worn, torn, or loose cartilage is cut away and removed with the aid of a pencil-thin viewing tube called an arthroscope. The second group underwent arthroscopic lavage, in which the bad cartilage is flushed out. The third group underwent simulated arthroscopic surgery; small incisions were made, but no instruments were inserted and no cartilage removed."

(Click title to read more)


Anissa Anderson Orr
Baylor College of Medicine

Thursday, August 19, 2004

Honorable Mention For Decorated Side Winder Sandal


Here is the pic of my sandals that won a spot in the dealer fashion show.

At the Annual Z-CoiL dealer conference this past June in Albuquerque there were so many dealers that showed up with decorated Z-CoiL's the company decided to run a fashion show.

A Step Above Footwear, LLC won an Honorable Mention with the decorated Side Winder Sandal.

The sandal was decorated with a thin point silver magic marker which you can find at most art supply stores. Or if you are not feeling creative, for $25 we at A Step Above can decorate the shoe for you.

We just passed our first anniversary of the store opening. To celebrate we are going to sponsor a free Shoe Decorating Class. Keep your eyes open for more information!

Carolyn
Posted by Hello

Wednesday, August 18, 2004

Suzuki Rock n' Roll Marathon Photo Finish

Here I am coming accross the finish line (Photo) at the Suzuki Rock n' Roll marathon in San Diego, June 2004. I walked, in my Z-CoiL's, the 26.2miles.

It took me awhile but I was incredibly vital at the end of the race.

My next marathon will be the Nike 26.2 in San Francisco, October, 2004. I'll be doing 1/2 of it but running.

Carolyn Linzner
A Step Above Footwear, LLC
Owner

A Step Above Footwear Testimonials For August

Z-CoiL Testimonial of the Month: AugustZ-CoiL Testimonial of the Month: August: "As a practicing physician for the last 27 years, you could say that I am one who "stands on her own two feet." Literally, though, I have been standing on my feet for much longer, first as a medical student, then as an intern and a resident, and after 11 long years of medical education, my feet have continued to stand firm at the bedside of my patients. I entered my residency with a shoe size 9, and I finished my training with a hefty size 10. Endless hours on call, all of them mostly standing, finally led to a fallen arch. Now, in my mature years, I have become a wiser, more experienced physician - with painful feet. My left foot has post-traumatic arthritis, and I feel a deep, piercing pain in my right heel from plantar fasciitis.

One weekend about three months ago, I limped into a medical meeting in Houston in my most expensive European shoes, outfitted with a heel pad and an insert, both of which had become of little value towards alleviating my pain. As I dragged myself past the booths displaying various technological exhibits, I noticed a booth with some funny-looking shoes, and an even funnier name: "Cra-Z-CoiL." To my surprise, I saw a number of physicians lined up in front of the booth waiting to try on those shoes. I decided to join the line, hoping the wait wouldn't be too long, since standing was becoming increasingly unbearable. When my turn came, I chose a pair of black sneakers. I stepped into them and I began to walk, and I walked, and walked, and walked, like a toddler fascinated with her first steps. I told my husband, "Please pay the lady and ask her to pack up my Mephistos; I am not getting out of these shoes!" And I haven't. The next day I bought my second pair, the black clogs, and I have not used any of my (many) other pairs of shoes since. "

Click on the title to read more!

If you have a personal Z-Coil Story you would like to share, just add it to comments.

Wednesday, August 04, 2004

Wearers of an unusual shoe swear it cuts foot, ankle, knee and back pain

Wearers of an unusual shoe swear it cuts foot, ankle, knee and back pain: "When Steve and Janice Dallas took the 2 1/2-hour drive from their home in Canton, Ohio, to Pittsburgh recently, they didn't come to watch the Pirates or visit one of the city's many museums.

They drove here to buy shoes.

Not just any pair, but Z-CoiLs.

'We've had stories of people who've traveled anywhere from two to eight hours to find a location because of how Z-CoiLs have helped people,' says Pamela Rachel Trhlik, communications manager for Z-CoiL Pain Relief Footwear of Albuquerque, N.M.
The shoes with a steel spring mounted on the heel definitely cause heads to turn. They don't make much of a fashion statement; the appeal is their ability to eliminate pain, advocates said.
'I felt immediate relief when I tried on my first pair,' said Stephenie Cready, 35, a hospice nurse from Eighty Four who has plantar fasciitis, a swelling of the thin layer of tissue that supports the arch of the foot. 'It feels like I have pillows on my feet.'"

Click Title To Read More


By Carole Reinert-Lucas
Post Gazette

Tuesday, August 03, 2004

Z-CoiL Footwear : EZ Shoes Blog

Z-CoiL Footwear: "I had a customer come into the store yesterday to get another pair of shoes. She basically said that Z-CoiL's have 'saved her life!' Her knees were in very bad condition and she was extremely overweight. With Z-CoiL's, she was able to start walking again, which changed her whole outlook on life! She started eating better, lost 100 pounds through dieting and exercise, and she has no more knee pain. She has topped her injections of cortisone and is no longer on Vicodan. The relationship with her family has improved because her own self-esteem has improved significantly. She's was not sure where she would be today if it wasn't for Z-CoiL's!

I see many people daily who have had life changing experiences through the use of our pain relief footwear... maybe it's time for you to make the change!

Till later...
Caesar..."

Monday, August 02, 2004

The Running Network: Forum: ZCoil Shoes

The Running Network: "Message:
Has anyone who has worn these zcoil shoes had spine fusion? If so please e-mail me.

Cammy
3/31/2004

My wife and I wear Z-Coils.

We found out about then and primarily wanted them for her, because of her bad knees (one is bone-on-bone). She is able to walk without pain for the first time in 5 years. Actually, a year ago, about a month before we found out about Z-Coils, she was in a wheelchair for a few weeks after one particularly bad meniscus tear.

They are truly amazing shoes!

I didn't have any serious pain issues, but I love them. That's all we wear anymore.

We finally decided to become dealers.

As for the rubber pad pulling away from the coil, neither of us has had that problem with any of our Z-Coils which we wear all the time. But it does happen sometimes and is easy to fix. It may have to do with how you are taking the shoe off (where you hold the shoe, etc when pulling it off), or the fact that some people are just simply tougher on shoes than others. I know I am harder on them than my wife! But in 6 months of business and having sold around 600 pairs, we have repaired maybe 10-12 that have done that, but all those were otherwise very satisfied with the shoes.

We have replaced only 3-4 (at $35 a set)and NONE of those were from those that we have sold, but people who have HAD their Z-Coils for 2-3 years! And every one of them bought another pair, so they must be pretty happy with them.

We have runners, personal trainers, clients of personal trainers, doctors, nurses, physical therapists, hairdressers, retail workers, younger people and older people (70's and 80's). They are not for everybody - some people we can't fit or help, but almost anyone can benefit from them!"

Mike
4/10/2004

To read more, click on title.