journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863537/tibiotalocalcaneal-and-tibiotalar-arthrodesis-for-severe-cavovarus-deformity-tips-and-tricks
#21
REVIEW
Inês Casais, Anny Steenwerckx, Kristian Buedts
Cavovarus foot is a complex 3-dimensional deformity. Clinical history, physical examination, and comorbidity assessment are essential for preoperative evaluation. In severe cases, ankle or tibiotalocalcaneal arthrodesis can provide symptomatic relief and result in a plantigrade foot. This article emphasizes the importance of weight-bearing computed tomography for surgical planning and presents the authors' preferred technique for tibiotalocalcaneal, which includes a novel curved anterolateral incision, partial fibular onlay bridging graft, and patient-specific instrumentation for forefoot deformity correction...
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863536/hindfoot-fusions-in-the-cavovarus-foot-what-is-the-key-for-a-successful-outcome
#22
REVIEW
Matthew James Welck, Anil Haldar
The aim of hindfoot fusions in the cavovarus foot is to establish a painless, plantigrade, balanced and stable foot. A comprehensive clinical and radiographic assessment enables the surgeon to fully understand the patient's deformity and plan a reliable surgical strategy for deformity correction. Pre-operative planning and intraoperative techniques are discussed.
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863535/midfoot-tarsectomy-in-cavovarus-why-psi-makes-a-difference
#23
REVIEW
Julie Mathieu, Louis Dagneaux
The cavovarus foot is a complex deformity that can be treated using multiple surgical procedures, ranging from soft tissue surgery to triple arthrodesis. Among these options, anterior midfoot tarsectomy is a three-dimensional closed-wedge osteotomy, traditionally performed slowly and progressively in a blind fashion, and remaining a challenge for unexperimented surgeons with variable outcomes. As such, we investigated and discussed the use of patient-specific cutting guides (PSCGs) in computer-assisted anterior midfoot tarsectomy in terms of accuracy, reproducibility, and safety...
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863534/posterior-heel-pain-in-cavovarus-foot-how-to-approach-it
#24
REVIEW
Conor Moran, Yves Tourné
When a patient presents with posterior heel pain on the background of a cavovarus foot, there are many different aspects to take into account. The morphology of the foot and the specific cause of the patient's pain lead the practitioner to alter the treatment appropriately. Some patients should only receive physiotherapy, but the majority should receive more invasive treatments, including calcaneal osteotomies or tendon debridement, depending on their particular presentation and pathology. This review examines the various different facets of posterior heel pain that must be dealt with and the most up-to-date treatments for the same...
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863533/ankle-instability-and-peroneal-disorders-in-cavovarus-feet-do-i-need-a-calcaneal-osteotomy
#25
REVIEW
Manfred Thomas, Elena Delmastro
In order to understand the relation among ankle instability, peroneal disorders, and cavovarus deformity, it is mandatory to clarify the different stages of those disorders and also to put them into relation to each other. Finally, we need to take the patients compliance and expectations into consideration to define the individually right way of treatment.
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863532/toes-deformities-in-cavovarus-how-to-approach-them
#26
REVIEW
Barbara Piclet-Legré, Véronique Darcel
Sagittal lesser toe deformities (LTD) are the most common in cavus foot. They are mainly the result of muscular imbalance between intrinsic and extrinsic muscles. Surgery is the second-line treatment if medical treatment fails. The aim of the present study was to provide an update on classification and surgical management of LTD in cavus foot including percutaneous procedures with a special focus on sagittal deformities. Joint sparing procedures are preferred for reducible LTD, whereas lesser toe fusions are used for rigid one in association with tendon transfer or percutaneous procedures depending of surgeon's experience and patient's clinical examination...
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863531/is-subtle-cavovarus-a-problem-for-athletes
#27
REVIEW
Ashraf T Hantouly, Ahmed Khalil Attia, Khalid Hasan, Pieter D'Hooghe
Cavovarus or high-arched foot is a common foot deformity that occurs due to the disruption of the foot-driven equilibrium between the first metatarsal, fifth metatarsal, and the heel. This imbalance leads to an increase in the foot's normal plantar concavity. Cavovarus deformity ranges from a mild and flexible malalignment to a fixed, complex, and severe deformation. Subtle cavovarus foot, the mild form of the cavus foot, was first described by Manoli and colleagues.
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863530/cavovarus-deformity-why-weight-bearing-computed-tomography-should-be-a-first-line-imaging-modality
#28
REVIEW
François Lintz, Alessio Bernasconi
Cavovarus foot is a complex three-dimensional deformity, which includes a wide range of clinical conditions from subtle deformities to disabling feet. In this article, the authors discuss the role of weight-bearing computed tomography, which might enable to avoid double imaging (radiographs + tomography) in patients for which a detailed osteoarticular assessment is required, with the advantage to obtain tomographic images in standing position and a reduction of radiation exposure.
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37863529/the-role-of-minimally-invasive-osteotomies-in-cavovarus-foot-reconstruction-detailed-technique-and-evidence-for-procedures
#29
REVIEW
Razi Zaidi, Thomas Lorchan Lewis, Robbie Ray
Percutaneous correction of cavus foot deformity can be achieved with satisfactory correction of foot anatomy and biomechanics. Surgical management of cavovarus foot reconstruction is an individualized combination of surgical procedures designed to correct deformity. Minimally invasive procedures using high-torque low-speed burr can facilitate large deformity correction without extensive soft tissue stripping. This article presents the operative technique for percutaneous cavus foot correction including a lateralizing calcaneal osteotomy and proximal first ray osteotomy...
December 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536827/advanced-foot-and-ankle-imaging-breaching-new-frontiers-for-more-accurate-diagnosis-and-post-operative-care
#30
EDITORIAL
Jan Fritz
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536826/high-resolution-ultrasound-of-the-foot-and-ankle
#31
REVIEW
Marcelo Bordalo, Marcos Felippe de Paula Correa, Eduardo Yamashiro
High-resolution ultrasound (US) can be used to assess soft tissue abnormalities in the foot and ankle. Compared to MRI, it has lower cost, is widely available, allows portability and dynamic assessment. US is an excellent method to evaluate foot and ankle tendon injuries, ligament tears, plantar fascia, peripheral nerves, and the different causes of metatarsalgia.
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536825/mri-of-pediatric-foot-and-ankle-conditions
#32
REVIEW
Bruno Cerretti Carneiro, Alípio G Ormond Filho, Júlio Brandão Guimarães
The increase in competitive sports practice among children and lack of ionizing radiation have resulted in a higher demand for MRI examinations. MRI of the children skeleton has some particularities that can lead orthopedists, pediatricians, and radiologists to diagnostic errors. The foot and ankle have several bones with abundant radiolucent and high signal intensity cartilage in several ossification centers, apophysis and physis, that can make this interpretation even harder. The present revision aims to show, how to differentiate between normal developmental findings and anatomic variants from pathologic conditions, whether mechanical, inflammatory, infectious, or neoplastic...
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536824/the-emerging-role-of-automation-measurement-standardization-and-artificial-intelligence-in-foot-and-ankle-imaging-an-update
#33
REVIEW
Samir Ghandour, Soheil Ashkani-Esfahani, John Y Kwon
In the past few years, advances in clinical imaging in the realm of foot and ankle have been consequential and game changing. Improvements in the hardware aspects, together with the development of computer-assisted interpretation and intervention tools, have led to a noticeable improvement in the quality of health care for foot and ankle patients. Focusing on the mainstay imaging tools, including radiographs, computed tomography scans, and ultrasound, in this review study, the authors explored the literature for reports on the new achievements in improving the quality, accuracy, accessibility, and affordability of clinical imaging in foot and ankle...
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536823/image-guided-foot-and-ankle-injections
#34
REVIEW
Ryan C Kruse, Brennan Boettcher
Ultrasound is a high-resolution, real-time imaging modality that is frequently used for image-guided procedures. Due to the highly complex anatomy of the foot and ankle, ultrasound should be considered a first-line imaging modality for injections and procedures in this region.
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536822/weight-bearing-computed-tomography-of-the-foot-and-ankle-what-to-measure
#35
REVIEW
Jaeyoung Kim, Scott Ellis, John A Carrino
Weight-bearing computed tomography (WBCT) was introduced in 2012 for foot and ankle applications as a breakthrough technology that enables full weight-bearing, three-dimensional imaging unaffected by x-ray beam projections or foot orientation. The literature describing the use of WBCT in the treatment of foot and ankle disorders is growing, and this article provides an overview of what can be measured with WBCT.
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536821/presurgical-and-postsurgical-mri-evaluation-of-osteochondral-lesions-of-the-foot-and-ankle-a-primer
#36
REVIEW
James J Butler, Taylor Wingo, John G Kennedy
The gold standard diagnostic imaging tool for ankle OCLs is magnetic resonance imaging, which allows precise evaluation of the articular cartilage and assessment of the surrounding soft tissue structures. Post-operative morphologic MRI assessment via MOCART scores provide semi-quantitative analysis of the repair tissue, but mixed evidence exists regarding its association with post-operative outcomes. Post-operative biochemical MRIs allow assessment of the collagen network of the articular cartilage via T2-mapping and T2∗ mapping, and assessment of the articular glycosaminoglycan content via delayed gadolinium-enhanced MRI of cartilage (dGEMRIC), T1rho mapping and sodium imaging...
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536820/osteomyelitis-and-septic-arthritis-of-the-foot-and-ankle-imaging-update
#37
REVIEW
Islam Zaki, William B Morrison
Radiography is considered the first-line screening exam for clinically suspected osteomyelitis. However, additional evaluation is generally needed. MRI is the definitive diagnostic exam with high sensitivity and specificity combined with excellent anatomic definition. Gadolinium contrast can be useful to detect areas of devitalization before surgery. Bone marrow edema on fluid-sensitive images and low signal intensity on T1-weighted images in the presence of secondary MRI findings, including ulcer, sinus tract, and cellulitis with or without abscess are typical findings of osteomyelitis...
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536819/magnetic-resonance-neurography-of-the-foot-and-ankle
#38
REVIEW
Patrick Debs, Laura M Fayad, Shivani Ahlawat
Peripheral neuropathies of the foot and ankle can be challenging to diagnose clinically due to concomitant traumatic and nontraumatic or degenerative orthopedic conditions. Although clinical history, physical examination, and electrodiagnostic testing comprised of nerve conduction velocities and electromyography are used primarily for the identification and classification of peripheral nerve disorders, MR neurography (MRN) can be used to visualize the peripheral nerves as well as the skeletal muscles of the foot and ankle for primary neurogenic pathology and skeletal muscle denervation effect...
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536818/two-dimensional-and-3-dimensional-mri-assessment-of-progressive-collapsing-foot-deformity-adult-acquired-flat-foot-deformity
#39
REVIEW
Prajwal Gowda, Ajit Kohli, Avneesh Chhabra
This article is meant to serve as a reference for radiologists, orthopedic surgeons, and other physicians to enhance their understanding of progressive collapsing foot deformity, also known as adult acquired flat foot deformity. Pathophysiology, imaging findings, especially on MRI and 3-dimensional MRI are discussed with relevant illustrations so that the readers can apply these principles in their practice for better patient managements.
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37536817/multiaxial-3d-mri-of-the-ankle-advanced-high-resolution-visualization-of-ligaments-tendons-and-articular-cartilage
#40
REVIEW
Benjamin Fritz, Cesar de Cesar Netto, Jan Fritz
MRI is a valuable tool for diagnosing a broad spectrum of acute and chronic ankle disorders, including ligament tears, tendinopathy, and osteochondral lesions. Traditional two-dimensional (2D) MRI provides a high image signal and contrast of anatomic structures for accurately characterizing articular cartilage, bone marrow, synovium, ligaments, tendons, and nerves. However, 2D MRI limitations are thick slices and fixed slice orientations. In clinical practice, 2D MRI is limited to 2 to 3 mm slice thickness, which can cause blurred contours of oblique structures due to volume averaging effects within the image slice...
September 2023: Foot and Ankle Clinics
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