Correction Of Arthrogrypotic Clubfoot With A Modified Ponseti Technique
Date
2009Author
van Bosse, Harold J. P.
Marangoz, Salih
Lehman, Wallace B.
Sala, Debra A.
- Citations
- CrossRef - Citation Indexes: 58
- Policy Citation - Policy Citations: 1
- PubMed - Citation Indexes: 18
- Scopus - Citation Indexes: 50
- Captures
- Mendeley - Readers: 99
publications
72
supporting
3
mentioning
70
contrasting
0
72
3
70
0
Citing PublicationsSupportingMentioningContrasting
See how this article has been cited at scite.ai
scite shows how a scientific paper has been cited by providing the context of the citation, a classification describing whether it supports, mentions, or contrasts the cited claim, and a label indicating in which section the citation was made.
xmlui.mirage2.itemSummaryView.MetaData
Show full item recordAbstract
Surgical releases for arthrogrypotic clubfeet have high recurrence rates, require further surgery, and result in short, painful feet. We asked whether a modified Ponseti technique could achieve plantigrade, braceable feet. Ten patients (mean age, 16.2 months; range, 3-40 months), with 19 arthrogrypotic clubfeet, underwent an initial percutaneous Achilles tenotomy to unlock the calcaneus from the posterior tibia followed by weekly Ponseti-style casts. A second percutaneous Achilles tenotomy was performed in 53%. Mean number of casts was 7.7 (range, 4-12). From pretreatment to completion of initial series of casts, mean scores of Dimeglio et al. improved from 16 to 5 (ranges, 12-18 and 2-9, respectively), Catterall scores (as modified by Pirani and colleagues) from 4.8 to 0.9 (ranges, 1.5-6.0 and 0.0-2.0), and maximum passive dorsiflexion from -45A degrees (range, -75A degrees to -20A degrees) to 10A degrees (range, 0A degrees to 40A degrees). Ankle-foot orthoses maintained correction. At the minimum followup of 13 months (mean, 38.5 months; range, 13-70 months), the mean maximum dorsiflexion was 5A degrees (range, -20A degrees to 20A degrees), two patients had posterior releases and no patient's ambulatory ability was compromised by foot shape. Arthrogrypotic clubfeet can be corrected without extensive surgery during infancy or early childhood. Limited surgery may be required as the children age.