Patients often come to the clinic complaining of forefoot plantar pain, often accompanied by significant localized swelling and plantar calluses, and difficulty walking. Patients often feel like there are stones on the bottom of their feet, and calluses recur, although they are frequently repaired. This condition is often seen in middle-aged and elderly women, and after X-ray examination, degeneration of the metatarsophalangeal joint is obvious, with hyperplasia and narrowing of the gap, and deformation of the metatarsal head with cystic changes. This type of disease can be treated with oral medication, foot pads, joint cavity closure or sodium glass injection, and surgery depending on the severity of the disease, but only metatarsophalangeal arthroplasty and arthroplasty can be used in advanced stages.