| Literature DB >> 27512692 |
Abstract
We are currently in the process of discovering that many, if not the majority, of the non-traumatic acquired adult foot and ankle problems are caused by a singular etiology: non-neuromuscular equinus or the isolated gastrocnemius contracture. There is no question that this biomechanical association exists and in time much more will be uncovered. There are three basic questions that must be answered: why would our calves tighten as we normally age, how does a tight calf, or equinus, actually cause problems remotely in the foot and ankle, and how do the forces produced by equinus cause so many seemingly unrelated pathologies in the foot and ankle? The purpose of this paper is to address the second question: how does a tight calf mechanically cause problems remotely in the foot and ankle? There has been little evidence in the literature addressing the biomechanical mechanisms by which equinus creates damaging forces upon the foot and ankle, and as a result, a precise, convincing mechanism is still lacking. Thus, the mere concept that equinus has anything to do with foot pathology is generally unknown or disregarded. The split second effect, described here, defines exactly how the silent equinus contracture creates incremental and significant damage and injury to the human foot and ankle resulting in a wide variety of pathological conditions. The split second effect is a dissenting theory based on 30 years of clinical and academic orthopedic foot and ankle experience, keen clinical observation along the way, and review of the developing literature, culminating in examination of many hours of slow motion video of normal and abnormal human gait. To my knowledge, no one has ever described the mechanism in detail this precise.Entities:
Keywords: Achilles tendinitis; Charcot arthropathy; biomechanics of gait; equinus; insertional Achilles tendinosis; isolated gastrocnemius contracture; midfoot arthritis; plantar fasciitis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27512692 PMCID: PMC4961717 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2016.00038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of the evolution of the equine quadruped (left) to human biped (right).
Figure 2Motion analysis compared to same subject on treadmill shot at 250 FPS of subject with bilateral equinus and history right plantar fasciitis who is asymptomatic at time of testing. At 28–45%, frames C–D depict the timing of the split second effect. There is accentuated knee extension and a failure of ankle dorsiflexion. This lack of normal ankle dorsiflexion motion gives rise to leveraged forces upon the foot and ankle.
Figure 3The leveraged forces produced from terminal knee extension during the split second effect via the gastrocnemius by a second class lever mechanism.
Figure 4Video still capture from video shot at 250 FPS of a 23-year-old asymptomatic female with painless flexible flatfeet. This visibly exhibits the motion transfer from the ankle (R2) to the midfoot/transverse tarsal joint (R4) when there is equinus. If this flexibility at R4 seen here visibly is not present, such as a normal, less flexible midfoot, the motion is replaced by leveraged forces to the midfoot joints or to the posterior tibialis tendon/spring ligament at the transverse tarsal joint.