The clinical appearance of heel pain in diabetic patients requires clarification of the etiology and treatment of the cause. Clinically, it is commonly seen in the following cases: 1. Diabetic patients present with, left heel pain accompanied by skin redness, swelling and pain, which appear suddenly, suggesting the possibility of ventilatory attack, and need to improve uric acid monitoring. If uric acid is significantly high, symptomatic treatment with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs, commonly used as diclofenac, needs to be given. After the pain is relieved, febuxostat should be routinely given to lower uric acid treatment, and attention should be paid to a low purine diet. 2. Pain in the heel of diabetic patients, which is obvious when walking and relieved at rest, is commonly caused by the formation of bone spurs at the root of the foot, and foot radiographs need to be perfected and surgical treatment should be performed if necessary.