That headline is misleading. Swollen feet are not a single “clear sign” of one condition—they can have many causes, ranging from harmless to serious.
Here’s how to understand it properly:
🦶 Common (often harmless) causes
🪑 1. Sitting or standing too long
- Fluid pools in the lower legs
- Very common during travel or long work hours
🌡️ 2. Heat
- Blood vessels expand in warm weather
- Leads to temporary swelling
🧂 3. High salt intake
- Causes the body to retain water
🤰 4. Pregnancy
- Normal fluid retention, especially in later months
🩺 Medical causes to be aware of
🫀 1. Heart failure
- Fluid buildup due to reduced heart pumping
- Often with shortness of breath or fatigue
🦵 2. Venous insufficiency
- Veins don’t return blood efficiently
- Causes chronic leg and ankle swelling
🩸 3. Blood clot (deep vein thrombosis)
- Usually one leg only
- Pain, redness, warmth
👉 This needs urgent medical attention
🩺 4. Kidney or liver problems
- Affect fluid balance in the body
- May cause swelling in legs and other areas
💊 5. Medications
Some drugs (like certain blood pressure medicines) can cause swelling as a side effect.
🚨 When to seek medical help
Get checked if swelling:
- appears suddenly
- is only in one leg
- is painful or red
- comes with shortness of breath
- keeps getting worse
🧠 Simple takeaway
Swollen feet are a symptom with many possible causes—not a single clear diagnosis. Context and other symptoms matter.
If you want, I can help you:
- figure out likely causes based on your symptoms
- or show simple ways to reduce swelling at home safely
- or explain when swelling is dangerous vs normal