| Literature DB >> 26072327 |
Mia Dunkley1, Yael Gelfer, Debbie Jackson, Evette Parnell, Jennifer Armstong, Cristina Rafter, Deborah M Eastwood.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Ponseti method is the preferred treatment for idiopathic clubfoot. Although popularised by orthopaedic surgeons it has expanded to physiotherapists and other health practitioners. This study reviews the results of a physiotherapist-led Ponseti service for idiopathic and non-idiopathic clubfeet and compares these results with those reported by other groups.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26072327 PMCID: PMC4486504 DOI: 10.1007/s11832-015-0658-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Orthop ISSN: 1863-2521 Impact factor: 1.548
Evertor activity
| Muscle activity grade | Movement observeda |
|---|---|
| 0 | Sustained/normal toe dorsiflexion and foot eversion |
| 0.5 | Some foot evertor activity and/or toe flaring |
| 1 | No toe flaring or foot eversion |
aToe dorsiflexion and foot evertor movement noted in response to stroking the sole or the dorsolateral aspect of the calf/foot
Fig. 1Position of hands to correct the hyperflexion and equinus simultaneously in the complex feet
Fig. 2Position of felt applied to calf to help prevent cast slippage in cases of severe equinus and/or limited knee flexion
Demographic details of both patient cohorts
| Non-idiopathic (69 feet in 41 patients) | Idiopathic (77 feet in 50 patients) | Significance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male:female | 24:17 | 33:17 | NS |
| Percentage bilateral | 67 % | 58 % | NS |
| Mean age (range) at onset of treatment | 2.8 months (3 days to 9 months) | 2.8 months (10 days to 11 months) | NS |
| Mean duration (range) of follow-up (post correction) | 4.6 years (2–8 years) | 4.9 years (2–8.3 years) | NS |
| Mean Pirani score (range) at treatment onset | 5.5 (3–6) | 5.0 (2.5–6) | NS |
| Compliance (%) | 80 % | 80 % | NS |
| Median number of casts (range) | 7 (1–19) | 5 (1–13) | NS |
| Feet with a poor Evertor score (0.5 or 1) | 55/67 (2 not recorded) | 26/77 |
|
| Tenotomy (%) | 83 % | 63 % |
|
Aetiology of foot deformity in the non-idiopathic group
| Aetiological grouping | No of patients (feet) | No of Ponseti failures patients (feet) | Recurrent deformity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spinal dysraphism | 15 (24) | 1 (2) | 13/22 feet (60 %) |
| Skeletal dysplasia | 9 (15) | 3/15 feet (20 %) | |
| Arthrogryposis | 7 (13) | 1 (1) | 2/12 feet (17 %) |
| Other syndromes | 5 (8) | None | |
| Other neurological problems | 4 (7) | 4/7 | |
| Complex amniotic band | 1 (2) | 2/2 |
Non-idiopathic group: treatment of first relapse
| Treatment | Number of feet | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Recast only | 13 | 9/13 feet second recurrence |
| Recast and TAT | 2 | 2/2 feet second recurrence |
| Recast and TATT | 5 | Correction maintained |
| Recast and TATT and TAT | 2 | Correction maintained |
| Holistic management—no treatment offered | 2 |
TATT tibialis anterior tendon transfer, TAT tenotomy of the Achilles tendon
Non-idiopathic group: treatment of the second relapse
| Treatment | Number of feet | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Recast only | 4 | 4/4 feet third recurrence |
| Recast, TATT and TAT | 1 | |
| Peritalar release | 4 | |
| Talectomy | 1 | |
| Holistic management—no treatment offered | 1 |
TATT tibialis anterior tendon transfer, TAT tenotomy of the Achilles tendon