Proprioception was measured in the knees of 20 subjects with instability of the anterior cruciate ligament and compared with 17 age-matched control subjects. There was diminished position sense and threshold for movement detection in the injured patients compared with the control group. The proprioceptive deficit recorded from the injured knee showed a significant correlation with the hamstring/quadriceps power ratio recorded from the injured leg.
We present the radiographic results after flexor digitorum longus tendon transfer combined with a medial displacement calcaneal osteotomy for the treatment of posterior tibial tendon insufficiency. Eighteen patients with posterior tibial tendon insufficiency were reviewed from 12 to 26 months after surgery. The 15 women and 3 men had a mean age of 54 years (range, 38-72 years). The talar-first metatarsal and talonavicular coverage angles were measured before and after surgery on the anteroposterior weightbearing radiographs. The mean preoperative talar-first metatarsal and talonavicular coverage angles were 21 degrees (range, 3-45 degrees) and 34 degrees (range, 0-55 degrees), respectively. The mean postoperative values for these angles were 8.5 degrees (range, 0-35 degrees) and 21 degrees (range, -30-45 degrees), respectively. The mean talar-first metatarsal angle decreased from 21 degrees to 8.5 degrees, a mean improvement of 12.5 degrees, and the mean talonavicular coverage angle decreased from 34 degrees to 21 degrees, a mean improvement of 13 degrees. On the lateral weightbearing radiographs, the talar-first metatarsal angle and the distance from the medial cuneiform to the floor were measured before and after surgery. The mean preoperative values were -22 degrees (range, -10 to -40 degrees) and 9 mm (range, 1-19 mm), respectively. The mean postoperative values were -9 degrees (range, +5 to -25 degrees) and 16 mm (range, 10-28 mm), respectively. The mean talar-first metatarsal angle decreased from -22 to -9 degrees (a mean improvement of 13 degrees), and the distance from the medial cuneiform to the floor increased from 9 to 16 mm (a mean improvement of 7 mm). We conclude that the use of a combined medial displacement osteotomy of the calcaneus with a tendon transfer for treatment of posterior tibial tendon insufficiency may offset the inherent weakness of the flexor digitorum longus transfer by reducing the antagonistic deforming force of heel valgus.
Sixty feet of 30 normal subjects were investigated to determine the effect of changing the heel height on forefoot loading. Subjects walked across footplates barefoot and with rigid polyurethane heels attached to the foot with a tubular bandage. The total load on the forefoot remained unchanged at all of the heel heights, but the distribution of the load changed as the heel was raised. The area of forefoot contact with the footplates decreased and there was a deviation of load toward the medial side of the forefoot with a resultant increase in pressure. These effects could contribute to overload of the distal forefoot and especially of the first ray.
We treated 32 patients with stage-II posterior tibial tendon dysfunction with calcaneal osteotomy and flexor digitorum longus tendon transfer. These 32 patients (29 women, 3 men) had an average age of 58 years (range, 46 to 73 years) and had been symptomatic for an average of 2.5 years (range, 1 to 8 years) before surgical correction. The indication for surgery was the presence of medial foot pain refractory to nonoperative treatments, including shoewear modifications, orthoses, and bracing. All patients were examined at a mean of 20 months (range, 14 to 48 months) after surgery. Functional and radiographic examinations were performed for each patient and the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) foot rating scale was used. Of the 32 patients, 30 were satisfied with the outcome of surgery, had improved function, and exhibited radiographic correction of the foot deformity. The AOFAS score improved from a preoperative mean of 48 points (range, 23 to 76) to a postoperative mean of 84 points (range, 68 to 92). In one patient, treatment failed, necessitating a triple arthrodesis for worsening deformity. The short-term results of this procedure are encouraging. Most patients (94%) experienced pain relief, had improvement in the arch of the foot, and were able to wear regular shoes without orthotic support. In order to correct deformity and provide substantial relief of foot pain and dysfunction, a medial translational calcaneal osteotomy was performed in addition to a flexor digitorum longus tendon transfer for management of stage-II posterior tibial tendon dysfunction.
Experimental and theoretical stress analysis methods are used to evaluate the mechanical behaviour of external jixation devices as load-bearing structures. For the experimental part, a modular assembly was fabricated from which unilateral and bilateral jixators of different design conjigurations were assembled and tested under various loading conditions. A reflective photoelasticity technique was used to study the eflect of frame configuration on the stress patterns generated around the pin-bone interface. Finite element models of each design were also generated using three-dimensional beam and shell elements. Spring elements were used to model the pinlsidebar clamp. It is shown that close correspondence between the experimental and theoretical methods of investigation is obtained when theflexibility of the pinfside-bar clamp is taken into account. It is also shown that a unilateral design, modified by attaching a second side-bar to the first and connecting them by means of a semicircular component, can achieve some of the structural advantages of bilateraljixators without the clinical disadvantage of transfixing pins.
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