277 results on '"Saltzman CL"'
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2. Normative Verteilung der axialen Rotation des ersten Mittelfußknochens
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Schlickewei, C, Steadman, J, Frosch, KH, Saltzman, CL, Barg, A, Schlickewei, C, Steadman, J, Frosch, KH, Saltzman, CL, and Barg, A
- Published
- 2021
3. PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES OF MULTIPLE SPEED TREADMILL WALKING FOR SYME VERSUS TRANSTIBIAL AMPUTATION
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Lin, S-J, Nielsen, DH, Shurr, DG, and Saltzman, CL
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Treadmill exercise tests -- Physiological aspects ,Amputations of leg -- Care and treatment ,Motor ability -- Physiological aspects - Abstract
PURPOSE: Motor function and wound healing are important considerations when determining the level of lower extremity amputation. The choice of trying to salvage the longest limb possible has been largely based on the premise that a longer limb will provide enhanced performance. However, the more distal site of amputation may result in decreased circulation and impaired wound healing. Research on this topic is limited. The purpose of this study was to compare the physiologic responses between syme and transtibial treadmill walking in a longitudinal single subject experimental design. SUBJECTS: The test subject was a 35-year-old male traumatic syme amputee who underwent elective transtibial amputation due to chronic stump skin break-down and unstable gait with syme prosthesis. Fifteen male non-amputees (age: 26 [+ or -] 4) served as control subjects. METHODS: Testing involved a self-selected walking velocity (SSWV) test and a continuous multiple speed treadmill test (53.64, 67.05, 80.46, 93.87 and 107.28 m/min) pre-transtibial (syme) and 16 months post-transtibial amputation. A standardized protocol (3 min. acclimation, 2 min. timed distance measurement of comfortable walking over a 44-foot corridor) was used for the SSWV test. The outcome variables included oxygen uptake, relative exercise intensity (percent of age-predicted maximum heart rate) and gait efficiency (oxygen uptake per meter traveled). Oxygen uptake was determined with a metabolic cart and heart rate by ECG radiotelemetry. ANALYSIS: Descriptive analysis included within subject (syme versus transtibial) and between subject (amputee versus non-amputee) percent difference calculations and graphical comparisons. RESULTS: Compared to syme amputation, transtibial amputation showed a range of 3%-10% lower oxygen consumption, 7%-11% lower relative exercise intensity, 3% - 10% improvement in gait efficiency for the five speeds and an 8% improvement in SSWV (74 to 80 m/min) which was comparable to reported non-amputee SSWV. CONCLUSIONS: Based on the results of this study, the principles governing the decision of optimal level of lower extremity amputation in orthopedic surgery may need to be reconsidered. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: This research was partially supported by a grant from Flex-Foot Inc., Aliso Viego, CA, USA., Lin S-J, Nielsen DH, Shurr DG, (*) Saltzman CL; Physical Therapy Graduate Program, (*) Department of Orthopedic Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, [...]
- Published
- 2000
4. Physiological responses to multiple speed treadmill walking for Syme vs. transtibial amputation—a case report
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Lin-Chan, S, primary, Nielsen, DH, additional, Shurr, DG, additional, and Saltzman, CL, additional
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- 2003
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5. In vivo validation of in vitro testing of hallucal flexor mechanics
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Walsh, SM, primary, Saltzman, CL, additional, Talbot, KD, additional, Aper, RL, additional, and Brown, TD, additional
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- 1996
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6. Motion versus fixed distraction of the joint in the treatment of ankle osteoarthritis: a prospective randomized controlled trial.
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Saltzman CL, Hillis SL, Stolley MP, Anderson DD, Amendola A, Saltzman, Charles L, Hillis, Stephen L, Stolley, Mary P, Anderson, Donald D, and Amendola, Annunziato
- Abstract
Background: Initial reports have shown the efficacy of fixed distraction for the treatment of ankle osteoarthritis. We hypothesized that allowing ankle motion during distraction would result in significant improvements in outcomes compared with distraction without ankle motion.Methods: We conducted a prospective randomized controlled trial comparing the outcomes for patients with advanced ankle osteoarthritis who were managed with anterior osteophyte removal and either (1) fixed ankle distraction or (2) ankle distraction permitting joint motion. Thirty-six patients were randomized to treatment with either fixed distraction or distraction with motion. The patients were followed for twenty-four months after frame removal. The Ankle Osteoarthritis Scale (AOS) was the main outcome variable.Results: Two years after frame removal, subjects in both groups showed significant improvement compared with the status before treatment (p < 0.02 for both groups). The motion-distraction group had significantly better AOS scores than the fixed-distraction group at twenty-six, fifty-two, and 104 weeks after frame removal (p < 0.01 at each time point). At 104 weeks, the motion-distraction group had an overall mean improvement of 56.6% in the AOS score, whereas the fixed-distraction group had a mean improvement of 22.9% (p < 0.01).Conclusion: Distraction improved the patient-reported outcomes of treatment of ankle osteoarthritis. Adding ankle motion to distraction showed an early and sustained beneficial effect on outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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7. Impact of comorbidities on the measurement of health in patients with ankle osteoarthritis.
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Saltzman CL, Zimmerman MB, O'Rourke M, Brown TD, Buckwalter JA, Johnston R, Saltzman, Charles L, Zimmerman, M Bridget, O'Rourke, Michael, Brown, Thomas D, Buckwalter, Joseph A, and Johnston, Richard
- Abstract
Background: Investigators seeking to understand the impact of musculoskeletal disorders commonly use validated outcome instruments to assess the effect of diseases on physical function and quality of life. However, the influence of concomitant systemic or musculoskeletal comorbidities on these scores has not been widely considered in orthopaedic research. The purpose of this study was to determine how morbidity unrelated to the ankle influences the perception of physical function and pain by patients with ankle osteoarthritis.Methods: Short Form-36 (SF-36) Physical Component Summary (PCS) and Mental Component Summary (MCS) scores, Ankle Osteoarthritis Scale (AOS) pain scale scores, demographic data, and systemic and musculoskeletal comorbidities were determined prospectively for 195 patients with ankle osteoarthritis and ninety-five age and gender-matched controls. The effect of systemic and musculoskeletal comorbidities on each of the scores was determined.Results: On the average, patients with ankle osteoarthritis had a relatively normal MCS score (47 +/- 13 points) and a markedly diminished PCS score (32 +/- 8 points). Both of these scores averaged 50 +/- 9 points in the control group. The AOS pain score averaged 61 +/- 23 points in the group with ankle osteoarthritis, whereas it averaged 10 +/- 15 points in the control group. We found the perception of ankle pain by patients with ankle osteoarthritis to be significantly and linearly associated with the number of other musculoskeletal problems (not related to the foot or ankle).Conclusions: The degree of physical impairment associated with ankle osteoarthritis, as measured with the SF-36, is equivalent to that reported to be associated with severely disabling medical problems including end-stage kidney disease and congestive heart failure. The perception of ankle health status as measured with a validated, patient-oriented, anatomically specific instrument is influenced by the patients' perception of their overall musculoskeletal comorbidity status. The authors of clinical studies using these instruments should adjust for concomitant musculoskeletal disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
8. Posttraumatic osteoarthritis: a first estimate of incidence, prevalence, and burden of disease.
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Brown TD, Johnston RC, Saltzman CL, Marsh JL, and Buckwalter JA
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- 2006
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9. Effect of initial weight-bearing in a total contact cast on healing of diabetic foot ulcers.
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Saltzman CL, Zimmerman MB, Holdsworth RL, Beck S, Hartsell HD, Frantz RA, Saltzman, Charles L, Zimmerman, M Bridget, Holdsworth, Ryan L, Beck, Susan, Hartsell, Heather D, and Frantz, Rita A
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Background: Although total contact casts are highly effective in the treatment of plantar ulcerations in patients with diabetes mellitus, they are not widely used. One reason for this lack of acceptance may be the difficulty in complying with an initial period of non-weight-bearing, as is generally recommended by physicians. We performed this study to assess the effects of early weight-bearing on the healing rates of plantar ulcers in patients with diabetes who were wearing a total contact cast.Methods: Forty patients with diabetes mellitus who had a noninfected forefoot or midfoot ulcer were treated with total contact casts until healing or for thirteen weeks. The patients were instructed to bear no weight on the cast for forty-eight hours after it was applied. Using an embedded step counter, we measured the number of steps taken during the first twenty-four and forty-eight hours, the first week, and each subsequent two-week period after application of the cast. We removed the cast, measured the radius of the ulcer, and then reapplied the cast at the end of the first week and of each subsequent two-week period after cast application until the ulcer healed or for thirteen weeks. We then determined the effect of the number of steps during various time intervals on the rate of ulcer healing (defined as a change in the ulcer radius).Results: Most patients walked on the cast in the immediate postoperative period. The effects of modest amounts of early weight-bearing on ulcer healing rates appear negligible. Only excessive walking during the first twenty-four or forty-eight hours after cast application is likely to prolong the duration of cast treatment.Conclusions: Moderate early weight-bearing retards healing of plantar ulcers only minimally in patients with diabetes mellitus treated with total contact casts. Allowing patients to walk immediately after placement of a total contact cast may improve their acceptance of this form of therapy.Level Of Evidence: Therapeutic study, Level II-1 (prospective cohort study). See Instructions to Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2004
10. Retrospective review of eighteen patients who underwent transtibial amputation for intractable pain.
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Honkamp N, Amendola A, Hurwitz S, Saltzman CL, Honkamp, N, Amendola, A, Hurwitz, S, and Saltzman, C L
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Background: Amputations are rarely performed solely for pain relief because of concerns regarding the persistence of pain and disability after the procedure. The purpose of this study was to assess the outcome of below-the-knee amputations performed to relieve intractable foot and ankle pain.Methods: A chart review was conducted to identify all below-the-knee amputations that had been performed for the treatment of chronic foot and ankle pain by three orthopaedic foot and ankle specialists at three institutions. The inclusion criteria included (1) intractable foot or ankle pain as the surgical indication, (2) failure of maximal medical therapy, (3) failure of prior surgical reconstruction, and (4) a minimum follow-up period of twenty-four months after below-the-knee amputation. Patients with diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular occlusive disease, or peripheral neuropathy were excluded. Each participant completed a two-part questionnaire with regard to the levels of disability, function, pain, and recreational activity both before and after the amputation.Results: Twenty patients met the inclusion criteria, and eighteen completed the study. The study group included four women and fourteen men who had an average age of forty-two years (range, twenty-six to sixty-one years) and were followed for an average of forty-one months (range, twenty-five to eighty-five months) after the amputation. When asked whether they would have the below-the-knee amputation done again under similar circumstances, sixteen patients said yes, one was unsure, and one said no. The same distribution was observed when the patients were asked whether they were satisfied with the outcome: sixteen said yes, one was unsure, and one said no. Disability, pain, and recreational status were assessed with a 10-cm visual analog scale. After the amputation, the patients reported a decrease in both pain frequency (with the average score improving from 9.8 to 1.7; p < 0.0001) and pain intensity (with the average score improving from 8.4 to 2.6; p < 0.0001). Ten patients discontinued the use of narcotics, and seven decreased the level and/or dosage. Three patients worked before the amputation, and eight worked after the amputation. The average walking distance increased from 0.3 to 0.8 mile (p = 0.0034).Conclusion: In selected patients, a below-the-knee amputation may be a good salvage procedure for intractable foot and ankle pain that is unresponsive to all medical and local surgical reconstructive techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2001
11. The diabetic foot: basic mechanisms of disease.
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Guyton GP and Saltzman CL
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- 2001
12. Prosthetics and orthotics science. The repeatability of total contact cast applications: implications for clinical trials.
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Hartsell HD, Fellner C, Frantz R, and Saltzman CL
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- 2001
13. Long-term results following ankle arthrodesis for post-traumatic arthritis.
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Coester LM, Saltzman CL, Leupold J, Pontarelli W, Coester, L M, Saltzman, C L, Leupold, J, and Pontarelli, W
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Background: Ankle arthrodesis is considered by many to be the standard operative treatment for end-stage ankle arthritis; however, the long-term effect of ankle arthrodesis on other lower-extremity joints remains largely unknown. The purpose of this study was to perform a clinical and radiographic review to determine the effect of ankle arthrodesis on the development of osteoarthritis in other lower-extremity joints.Methods: Twenty-three patients who had had an isolated ankle arthrodesis for the treatment of painful posttraumatic arthritis of the ankle were followed for a mean of twenty-two years (range, twelve to forty-four years) after the operation. Each completed standardized, self-reported outcome questionnaires (the Foot Function Index, Western Ontario and McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index [WOMAC], and Short Form-36 [SF-36]), was examined clinically by two of the investigators, and underwent complete radiographic examination of the knee, ankle, and foot bilaterally. The radiographic grade of osteoarthritis was determined for each joint, and the levels of overall activity limitation, pain, and disability were determined for each patient from the clinical findings and questionnaire information.Results: Osteoarthritis of the ipsilateral subtalar (p<0.0001), talonavicular (p<0.0001), calcaneocuboid (p<0.0001), naviculocuneiform (p = 0.0012), tarsometatarsal (p = 0.0009), and first metatarsophalangeal joints (p = 0.0012) was consistently more severe than the osteoarthritis of those joints on the contralateral side. Osteoarthritis did not develop more frequently in the ipsilateral knee or lesser metatarsophalangeal joints than it did on the contralateral side. Significant differences between the two sides were found with regard to overall activity limitation (p<0.0001), pain (p<0.0001), and disability (p<0.0001), with the involved side consistently more symptomatic.Conclusions: To our knowledge, the present series represents the longest follow-up study of ankle arthrodesis to date. Our cohort of patients all had isolated post-traumatic ankle arthritis, and each underwent a successful isolated ankle arthrodesis. At a mean of twenty-two years, the majority of the patients had substantial, and accelerated, arthritic changes in the ipsilateral foot but not the knee. They were often limited functionally by foot pain. Although ankle arthrodesis may provide good early relief of pain, it is associated with premature deterioration of other joints of the foot and eventual arthritis, pain, and dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2001
14. Anatomy and biomechanics of the first ray.
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Glasoe WM, Yack HJ, and Saltzman CL
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- 1999
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15. The effect of foot structure on the three-dimensional kinematic coupling behavior of the leg and rear foot.
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Nawoczenski DA, Saltzman CL, and Cook TM
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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Differences in foot structures have been reported to account for the large variability in findings in previous studies that have examined the relationship between foot structure and the interdependent rotations of the lower extremity. The purpose of this study was to determine, in individuals with radiographically distinct foot structures, the effect of foot structure on three-dimensional kinematic behavior of the leg and rear foot during running. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Based on radiographic measurements, 10 recreational runners were assigned to a low rear-foot group and another 10 recreational runners were assigned to a high rear-foot group. Three-dimensional kinematic data were collected during treadmill running. Individual axis rotations and the 'coupled' relationship between the leg and rear-foot segments were defined using a Cardan angle system of three ordered rotations. RESULTS: The predominant rotations suggest a combined subtalar and talocalcaneal joint axis to favor calcaneal eversion and inversion for the low rear-foot group and tibial medial and lateral rotation for the high rear-foot group. Group differences were also found for the coupling ratio, which described the proportion of calcaneal eversion and inversion transferred or coupled to tibial axial rotation. CONCLUSION AND DISCUSSION: The rotational patterns and coupling response unique to each foot group may enhance our understanding of lower-extremity injuries related to certain foot structures. An assessment of the coupling relationship in combination with traditional frontal-plane measurements may better guide decisions regarding selection of footwear and orthoses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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16. Two types of therapeutic shoes were no better than usual footwear for preventing foot reulceration.
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Saltzman CL and Saltzman, Charles L
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- 2002
17. The Effect of Anesthesia on Passive Ankle Dorsiflexion.
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Tucker W, Saltzman HM, Kapron C, Trice W, Simister SK, Swenson J, and Saltzman CL
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- Humans, Adult, Female, Male, Range of Motion, Articular, Middle Aged, Muscle, Skeletal, Equinus Deformity surgery, Ankle physiopathology, Ankle surgery, Anesthesia, General, Ankle Joint physiopathology, Ankle Joint surgery
- Abstract
Background: Equinus contractures can commonly be due to contractures of gastrocnemius muscle or combined contractures of the gastrocnemius-soleus Achilles tendon complex. The decision to release part or all of the gastrocnemius-soleus Achilles tendon complex is often assessed intraoperatively while the patient is under anesthesia. It remains unknown whether the administration of general anesthesia affects the measurement of passive ankle dorsiflexion., Methods: The unaffected, nonoperative limb on 46 foot and ankle patients underwent a Silfverskiold test measuring passive ankle dorsiflexion preoperatively and intraoperatively after administration of general anesthesia using an instrumented force-angular displacement goniometer. To determine clinical significance, we surveyed experienced surgeons to estimate the perceived minimally detectable clinical accuracy for measuring passive ankle dorsiflexion., Results: Forty-six subjects were included with mean age of 42 ± 14.8 years, mean body mass index of 26.2 ± 4.9, and 52% female. The mean change in dorsiflexion values from before anesthesia to after the administration of general anesthesia was 1.9 degrees with 10 lb of pressure with knee extended (E10), 2.3 degrees with 20 lb of pressure with knee extended (E20), 2.8 degrees with 10 lb of pressure with knee flexed (F10), and 2.3 degrees with 20 lb of pressure with knee flexed (F20) (all P < .001). Thirty-three of 45 (73%) surgeons responded to the survey; all thought their minimally detectable clinical accuracy was 5 degrees or greater., Conclusion: After the administration of general anesthesia, a small but likely not clinically detectable increase in passive ankle dorsiflexion occurs. The common clinical practice of making intraoperative treatment decisions regarding the presence of a gastrocnemius-soleus driven equinus contractures after general anesthesia without use of paralytic agents appears reasonable given the magnitude of the changes identified in this study., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Charles L. Saltzman, MD, reports being the Editor-In-Chief of Foot & Ankle International. Disclosure forms for all authors are available online.
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- 2024
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18. Static posture weightbearing joint angle differences in patients with varus ankle osteoarthritis.
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Eatough ZJ, Peterson AC, Lisonbee RJ, Miyamoto T, Tanaka Y, Saltzman CL, Krähenbühl N, and Lenz AL
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Posture physiology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Aged, Adult, Case-Control Studies, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Osteoarthritis physiopathology, Osteoarthritis diagnostic imaging, Ankle Joint physiopathology, Ankle Joint diagnostic imaging, Weight-Bearing physiology
- Abstract
Background: Advanced varus ankle osteoarthritis is a debilitating disease that can present with limited physical function, severe pain, and diminished quality of life. Weightbearing computed tomography enables submillimeter 3-dimensional visualization, computational analyses, and enhanced diagnoses in reporting complex degenerative changes more accurately., Research Question: This study set to compare static posture weightbearing joint angle differences in healthy and varus ankle osteoarthritis patients (compensated and non-compensated)., Methods: Our retrospective assessment included 70 individuals, 44 of whom were diagnosed with advanced varus ankle osteoarthritis, and the remaining 26 were healthy participants to serve as controls. An automatic anatomic coordinate system was applied to each patient's 3-dimensional talus and calcaneus bone reconstructions from weightbearing computed tomography scans. Subtalar and midtarsal joint angles were calculated using Euler angles., Results: We report statistical differences between the healthy group and both advanced varus osteoarthritis groups for midtarsal inversion/eversion. Specifically, both osteoarthritis groups' midtarsal joints were more inverted and plantarflexed as compared to healthy participants. Compensated and non-compensated subtalar joints were statistically different with respect to inversion/eversion. Non-compensated ankles exhibited a similar mean to healthy ankles who were both less inverted than compensated ankles., Significance: Our study helps physicians to better understand underlying mechanisms of peritalar compensation in varus ankle osteoarthritis. Patients featuring hindfoot compensation on average had a greater subtalar joint angle indicating greater inversion than healthy and non-compensated patients., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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19. Conflict of Interest and FAI/FAO: Updated.
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Clanton TO, Rammelt S, Vander Griend RA, Campbell JT, Chiodo CP, Holmes GB Jr, Pinsker E, and Saltzman CL
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- 2024
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20. The Fallacy of the "Learning Curve".
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Campbell JT, Holmes GB Jr, Chiodo CP, Clanton TO, Pinsker E, Rammelt S, Vander Griend RA, and Saltzman CL
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- 2024
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21. Artificial Intelligence and Scholarly Publication in Foot & Ankle International and Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics .
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Vander Griend RA, Campbell JT, Chiodo CP, Clanton TO, Holmes GB Jr, Pinsker E, Rammelt S, and Saltzman CL
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- 2024
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22. Foot & Ankle International Commentary.
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Saltzman CL
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- Humans, Lower Extremity, Ankle, Joints
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- 2023
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23. Sesamoid View Weightbearing Radiography vs Weightbearing Computed Tomography in the Measurement of Metatarsal Pronation Angle.
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Siebert MJ, Steadman JN, and Saltzman CL
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- Humans, Pronation, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Radiography, Weight-Bearing, Retrospective Studies, Metatarsal Bones, Hallux Valgus diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: First metatarsal pronation angle (MPA) is increasingly relevant in the management of hallux valgus and is assessed on weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT) and sesamoid-view weightbearing radiography (WBR). The purpose of this study is to compare MPA measured by WBCT against WBR to determine if any systematic discrepancy in MPA measurement exists between the 2 modalities., Methods: A total of 40 patients with 55 feet were included for study. MPA was measured in all patients by 2 independent readers on both WBCT and WBR with an appropriate washout period between measurement modalities. Mean MPA by WBCT and WBR were analyzed; interobserver reliability was calculated with an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) value., Results: Mean MPA as measured by WBCT was 3.7 ± 7.9 degrees (95% CI, 1.6-5.9; range -11.7 to 20.5). Mean MPA measured on WBR was 3.6 ± 8.4 degrees, (95% CI, 1.4-5.8; range -12.6 to 21.4). There was no difference in MPA as measured by WBCT compared to WBR ( P = .529). Interobserver reliability was excellent with an ICC of 0.994 for WBCT and 0.986 for WBR., Conclusion: Measurement of first MPA by WBCT and WBR was not significantly different. In our cohort of patients with and without forefoot pathology, we found that either sesamoid view weightbearing radiographs or weightbearing CT can be used reliably to measure first MPA and will generate similar values., Level of Evidence: Level IV, case series.
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- 2023
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24. Scheduled, Simultaneous Dosing of Pregabalin, Celecoxib, and Acetaminophen Markedly Reduces or Eliminates Opioid Use After ACL Reconstruction Using Allograft or Hamstring Tendon Autograft: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Swenson JD, Conrad KM, Pace NL, Phillips K, and Saltzman CL
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Background: Opioid analgesics continue to be prescribed after ambulatory surgery despite untoward adverse effects, risk of overdose, and association with substance use disorder., Purpose/hypothesis: The purpose was to investigate the use of a novel system to provide scheduled and simultaneous dosing of acetaminophen, celecoxib, and pregabalin after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). It was hypothesized that this system would markedly reduce pain and opioid use compared with existing best practice., Study Design: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1., Methods: Included were 100 patients scheduled for elective, primary ACLR using allograft or hamstring tendon autograft. Selection criteria included age between 18 and 65 years and weight between 65 and 120 kg. Exclusion criteria were a known allergy to any drug used in the study or the use of opioid analgesics before surgery. Patients in the intervention group received a blister pack with scheduled, simultaneous doses of acetaminophen, celecoxib, and pregabalin; patients were also given oxycodone 5 mg as needed for breakthrough pain. Patients in the control group were prescribed ibuprofen and oxycodone 5 mg/acetaminophen 325 mg as needed for pain. The primary outcome measure was pain. Secondary outcomes were nausea, itching, and daily oxycodone use. Patients were asked to quantify their average pain at rest, nausea, and itching on an 11-point verbal scale (from 0 to 10). These data were recorded for 6 days during daily telephone contacts with patients after hospital discharge., Results: Cumulative results for 6 days showed significantly lower values in the intervention group compared with the control group for pain (median [interquartile range], 28 [14-35] vs 35 [28-41], respectively; P = .009) and oxycodone use (median [interquartile range] number of tablets, 0 [0-2] vs 8 [1.25-16], respectively; P < .001). Based on these data, the upper tolerance limits for the number of oxycodone tablets required by 90% of patients in the intervention and control groups were 8 tablets and 30 tablets, respectively. Cumulative results for nausea and itching were also significantly lower for the intervention group. Most patients in the intervention group used no opioids during recovery., Conclusion: Simultaneous dosing of 3 nonopioid analgesics resulted in reduced postoperative pain and markedly lower opioid use., Registration: NCT04015908 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier)., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: C.L.S. has received consulting fees from Smith & Nephew, Wright Medical, and Zimmer Biomet; royalties from Limacorporate and Wright Medical; and hospitality payments from Lima USA. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2022
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25. Multi-level multi-domain statistical shape model of the subtalar, talonavicular, and calcaneocuboid joints.
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Peterson AC, Lisonbee RJ, Krähenbühl N, Saltzman CL, Barg A, Khan N, Elhabian SY, and Lenz AL
- Abstract
Traditionally, two-dimensional conventional radiographs have been the primary tool to measure the complex morphology of the foot and ankle. However, the subtalar, talonavicular, and calcaneocuboid joints are challenging to assess due to their bone morphology and locations within the ankle. Weightbearing computed tomography is a novel high-resolution volumetric imaging mechanism that allows detailed generation of 3D bone reconstructions. This study aimed to develop a multi-domain statistical shape model to assess morphologic and alignment variation of the subtalar, talonavicular, and calcaneocuboid joints across an asymptomatic population and calculate 3D joint measurements in a consistent weightbearing position. Specific joint measurements included joint space distance, congruence, and coverage. Noteworthy anatomical variation predominantly included the talus and calcaneus, specifically an inverse relationship regarding talar dome heightening and calcaneal shortening. While there was minimal navicular and cuboid shape variation, there were alignment variations within these joints; the most notable is the rotational aspect about the anterior-posterior axis. This study also found that multi-domain modeling may be able to predict joint space distance measurements within a population. Additionally, variation across a population of these four bones may be driven far more by morphology than by alignment variation based on all three joint measurements. These data are beneficial in furthering our understanding of joint-level morphology and alignment variants to guide advancements in ankle joint pathological care and operative treatments., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Peterson, Lisonbee, Krähenbühl, Saltzman, Barg, Khan, Elhabian and Lenz.)
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- 2022
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26. Impact of First Metatarsal Hyperpronation on First Ray Alignment: A Study in Cadavers.
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Lalevée M, Dibbern K, Barbachan Mansur NS, Walt J, Lee HY, Coillard JY, Saltzman CL, and de Cesar Netto C
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- Cadaver, Humans, Osteotomy methods, Hallux Valgus diagnostic imaging, Hallux Valgus surgery, Metatarsal Bones diagnostic imaging, Metatarsal Bones surgery, Metatarsophalangeal Joint diagnostic imaging, Metatarsophalangeal Joint surgery
- Abstract
Background: There is increased evidence of first metatarsal hyperpronation in patients with hallux valgus, but its impact on the stability of the first metatarsophalangeal and metatarsosesamoid joints is unknown. A previous biomechanical study showed that an increase in hallucal pronation might lead to medial soft tissue failure of the first metatarsophalangeal joint. Conversely, dynamic studies on hallux valgus have shown that the first tarsometatarsal joint moves in supination during weightbearing, and supination was associated with an increase in the intermetatarsal angle (IMA) and hallux valgus angle (HVA)., Questions/purposes: (1) Does an increase in first metatarsal pronation cause an increase in hallucal pronation? (2) Can an intrinsic increase in first metatarsal pronation lead to first ray supination during weightbearing? (3) Can a combination of intrinsic first metatarsal hyperpronation and first metatarsophalangeal medial soft tissue failure increase supination of the first ray during weightbearing? (4) Is first ray supination during weightbearing associated with an increase in the IMA and HVA?, Methods: Twelve transtibial, nonpaired cadaver specimens without deformities were used. Each specimen underwent six weightbearing CT scans under different conditions. The first three CT examinations were performed without any osteotomy of the first metatarsal. The first was a simulated nonweightbearing condition. The second was a simulated weightbearing condition. The third was a simulated weightbearing condition with medial soft tissue release. Subsequentially, a 30° pronation osteotomy of the first metatarsal was performed, and the same sequence of weightbearing CT images was obtained. On each weightbearing CT image, the HVA, IMA, sesamoid rotation angle, metatarsal pronation angle (MPA), metatarsosesamoid rotation angle, and hallucal pronation (HP) were measured. Motions were calculated based on the differential values of these angular measurements produced by the six different conditions (weightbearing, medial soft tissue release, 30° pronation osteotomy, and combinations of these conditions). We compared means using a t-test for normally distributed variables and the Mann-Whitney U test for nonnormally distributed variables. Correlations were assessed with Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients., Results: We found that 30° pronation osteotomy of the first metatarsal increased the MPA and HP by 28° ± 4° and 26° ± 6°, respectively, in the nonweightbearing condition. No differences between the increase in MPA and the increase in HP were noted (mean difference 2° [95% CI -1° to 5°]; p = 0.20). Therefore, an increase in first metatarsal pronation caused an increase in hallucal pronation. When a 30° pronation osteotomy of the first metatarsal was performed, the first ray motion during weightbearing went from pronation to supination (4° ± 2° in pronation without osteotomy versus 4° ± 2° in supination after the osteotomy, mean difference 8° [95% CI 6° to 9°]; p < 0.001). Therefore, an intrinsic increase in pronation of the first metatarsal led to a first ray supination motion during weightbearing. When a first metatarsophalangeal medial soft tissue release was performed in addition to the 30° osteotomy of the first metatarsal, the supination motion of the first ray increased (4° ± 2° without medial soft tissue release versus 11° ± 7° after the release, mean difference 8° [95% CI 3° to 12°]; p = 0.003). Therefore, a combination of intrinsic first metatarsal hyperpronation and first metatarsophalangeal medial soft tissue failure increased supination of the first ray during weightbearing. Regarding static angular measurements, the HVA and IMA were not correlated with the MPA (ρ = 0.20; p = 0.09 and ρ = 0.22; p = 0.07, respectively). Regarding motions, as the HVA and IMA increased from nonweightbearing to weightbearing the pronation decreased, with strong correlations (ρ = -0.82; p < 0.001 and ρ = -0.77; p < 0.001, respectively). Therefore, a first ray supination during weightbearing was associated with an increase in the HVA and IMA., Conclusion: The combination of first metatarsal intrinsic hyperpronation and first metatarsophalangeal medial soft tissue failure led to a hallux valgus deformity in this cadaveric study. The static measurement of first metatarsal head pronation relative to the ground (MPA) did not reflect the real intrinsic pronation of the first ray, and foot and ankle specialists should be careful when interpreting these measurements. Hallux valgus is a dynamic condition, and the deformity could be more correlated with motions during weightbearing than with plain static measurements., Clinical Relevance: First ray supination compensating for first metatarsal intrinsic hyperpronation might be an important factor in the hallux valgus pathogenesis. Further in vivo studies involving nonweightbearing and weightbearing comparative assessments of hallux valgus and controls should be performed to confirm this pathomechanism., Competing Interests: All ICMJE Conflict of Interest Forms for authors and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® editors and board members are on file with the publication and can be viewed on request., (Copyright © 2022 by the Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons.)
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- 2022
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27. American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery's Initiatives Toward Competency-Based Education.
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Van Heest AE, Armstrong AD, Bednar MS, Carpenter JE, Garvin KL, Harrast JJ, Martin DF, Murray PM, Peabody TD, Saltzman CL, Saniei M, Taitsman LA, and Marsh JL
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The American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery (ABOS) is the national organization charged with defining education standards for graduate medical education in orthopaedic surgery. The purpose of this article is to describe initiatives taken by the ABOS to develop assessments of competency of residents to document their progress toward the independent practice of orthopaedic surgery and provide feedback for improved performance during training. These initiatives are called the ABOS Knowledge, Skills, and Behavior Program. Web-based assessment tools have been developed and validated to measure competence. These assessments guide resident progress through residency education and better define the competency level by the end of training. The background and rationale for these initiatives and how they serve as steps toward competency-based education in orthopaedic residency education in the United States will be reviewed with a vision of a hybrid of time and competency-based orthopaedic residency education that will remain 5 years in length, with residents assessed using standardized tools., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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28. Association of Normal vs Abnormal Meary Angle With Hindfoot Malalignment and First Metatarsal Rotation: A Short Report.
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Steadman J, Bakshi N, Philippi M, Arena C, Leake R, Barg A, and Saltzman CL
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- Foot diagnostic imaging, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Rotation, Metatarsal Bones diagnostic imaging
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Background: Recent work has reported a significant association between first metatarsal (M1) rotation and hindfoot alignment, with the finding of a moderate association between the calcaneal moment arm (CMA) and 2 M1 pronation angular measures: Saltzman ( r = 0.641, P < .01) and Kim ( r = 0.615, P < .01). The aim of the current post hoc investigation was to determine if this association is related with Meary angle., Methods: We reanalyzed previously published data set separating patients into 2 groups: (1) those with normal Meary angle (n = 128) and (2) those with abnormal Meary angle (n = 147). Hindfoot alignment and M1 rotation were measured on weightbearing computed tomography. Statistical analyses were performed to evaluate for association between these variables among the groups., Results: The correlation between CMA and M1 rotation of the entire cohort was r = 0.577 (Saltzman ankle) and r = 0.540 (Kim angle). For the subset with a normal Meary angle, this association was negligible (Saltzman and Kim angles, r = 0.194 and 0.240, respectively). Conversely, for the abnormal Meary angle subset, the association was substantial (Saltzman and Kim angles, r = 0.733 and 0.675, respectively)., Conclusion: Patients presenting with an abnormal Meary angle and hindfoot deformity have a high likelihood of manifesting a proportionate degree of M1 rotation., Level of Evidence: Level III, Retrospective Cohort Study.
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- 2022
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29. How Do PROMIS Scores Correspond to Common Physical Abilities?
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Brodke DJ, Zhang C, Shaw JD, Cizik AM, Saltzman CL, and Brodke DS
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- Activities of Daily Living, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Minimal Clinically Important Difference, Spine, Musculoskeletal Diseases, Patient Reported Outcome Measures
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Background: The Patient-Report Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) is increasingly used as a general-purpose tool for measuring orthopaedic surgery outcomes. This set of questionnaires is efficient, precise, and correlates well with specialty-specific measures, but impactful implementation of patient-specific data, especially at the point of care, remains a challenge. Although clinicians may have substantial experience with established patient-reported outcome measures in their fields, PROMIS is relatively new, and the real-life meaning of PROMIS numerical summary scores may be unknown to many orthopaedic surgeons., Questions/purposes: We aimed to (1) identify a small subset of important items in the PROMIS Physical Function (PF) item bank that are answered by many patients with orthopaedic conditions and (2) graphically display characteristic responses to these items across the physical function spectrum in order to translate PROMIS numerical scores into physical ability levels using clinically relevant, familiar terms., Methods: In a cross-sectional study, 97,852 PROMIS PF assessments completed by 37,517 patients with orthopaedic conditions presenting to a tertiary-care academic institution were pooled and descriptively analyzed. Between 2017 and 2020, we evaluated 75,354 patients for outpatient orthopaedic care. Of these, 67% (50,578) were eligible for inclusion because they completed a PROMIS version 2.0 physical function assessment; 17% (12,720) were excluded because they lacked information in the database on individual item responses, and another < 1% (341) were excluded because the assessment standard error was greater than 0.32, leaving 50% of the patients (37,517) for analysis. The PROMIS PF is scored on a 0-point to 100-point scale, with a population mean of 50 and SD of 10. Anchor-based minimum clinically important differences have been found to be 8 to 10 points in a foot and ankle population, 7 to 8 points in a spine population, and approximately 4 points in a hand surgery population. The most efficient and precise means of administering the PROMIS PF is as a computerized adaptive test (CAT), whereby an algorithm intelligently tailors each follow-up question based on responses to previous questions, requiring only a few targeted questions to generate an accurate result. In this study, the mean PROMIS PF score was 41 ± 9. The questions most frequently used by the PROMIS CAT software were identified (defined in this study as any question administered to > 0.1% of the cohort). To understand the ability levels of patients based on their individual scores, patients were grouped into score categories: < 18, 20 ± 2, 25 ± 2, 30 ± 2, 35 ± 2, 40 ± 2, 45 ± 2, 50 ± 2, 55 ± 2, 60 ± 2, and > 62. For each score category, the relative frequency of each possible response (ranging from "cannot do" to "without any difficulty") was determined for each question. The distribution of responses given by each score group for each question was graphically displayed to generate an intuitive map linking PROMIS scores to patient ability levels (with ability levels represented by how patients responded to the PROMIS items)., Results: Twenty-eight items from the 165-question item bank were used frequently (that is, administered to more than 0.1% of the cohort) by the PROMIS CAT software. The top four items constituted 63% of all items. These top four items asked about the patient's ability to perform 2 hours of physical labor, yard work, household chores, and walking more than 1 mile. Graphical displays of responses to the top 28 and top four items revealed how PROMIS scores correspond to patient ability levels. Patients with a score of 40 most frequently responded that they experienced "some difficulty" with physical labor, yard work, household chores, and walking more than 1 mile, compared with "little" or "no" difficulty for patients with a score of 50 and "cannot do" for patients with a score of 30., Conclusion: We provided a visual key linking PROMIS numerical scores to physical ability levels using clinically relevant, familiar terms. Future studies might investigate whether using similar graphical displays as a patient education tool enhances patient-provider communication and improves the patient experience., Clinical Relevance: The visual explanation of PROMIS scores provided by this study may help new users of the PROMIS understand the instrument, feel empowered to incorporate it into their practices, and use it as a tool for counseling patients about their scores., Competing Interests: Each author certifies that there are no funding or commercial associations (consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.) that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article related to the author or any immediate family members. All ICMJE Conflict of Interest Forms for authors and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® editors and board members are on file with the publication and can be viewed on request., (Copyright © 2021 by the Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons.)
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30. Interaction of loading and ligament injuries in subtalar joint instability quantified by 3D weightbearing computed tomography.
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Burssens A, Krähenbühl N, Lenz AL, Howell K, Zhang C, Sripanich Y, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Ankle Joint diagnostic imaging, Biomechanical Phenomena, Cadaver, Humans, Ligaments, Articular diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Weight-Bearing, Joint Instability diagnostic imaging, Joint Instability surgery, Subtalar Joint diagnostic imaging
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Despite decades of research since its first description, subtalar joint instability remains a diagnostic enigma within the concept of hindfoot instability. This could be attributed to current imaging techniques, which are impeded by two-dimensional measurements. Therefore, we used weightbearing computed tomography imaging to quantify three-dimensional displacement associated with subtalar joint instability. Three-dimensional models were generated in seven paired cadaver specimens to compute talocalcaneal displacement after different patterns of axial load (85 kg) combined with torque in internal and external rotation (10 Nm). Sequential imaging was repeated in the subtalar joint containing intact ligaments to determine reference displacement. Afterward, the interosseus talocalcaneal ligament (ITCL) or calcaneofibular ligament (CFL) was sectioned, then the ITCL with CFL and after the ITCL, CFL with the deltoid ligament (DL). The highest translation could be detected in the dorsal direction and the highest rotation occurred in the internal direction when external torque was applied to the foot without load. These displacements differed significantly from the condition containing intact ligaments, with a mean difference of 1.6 mm (95% CI, 1.3 to 1.9) for dorsal translation and a mean of 12.4° (95% CI, 10.1 to 14.8) for internal rotation. Clinical relevance: Our study provides a novel and noninvasive analysis to quantify subtalar joint instability based on three-dimensional WBCT imaging. This approach overcomes former studies using trans-osseous fixation to determine three-dimensional subtalar joint displacement and implements an imaging device and software modalities that are readily available. Based on our findings, we recommend applying torque in external rotation to the foot to optimize the detection of subtalar joint instability., (© 2021 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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31. Talar Dome Access Through Posteromedial Surgical Intervals for Fracture Care.
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DeKeyser GJ, O'Neill DC, Sripanich Y, Lenz AL, Saltzman CL, Haller JM, and Barg A
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- Ankle Joint surgery, Cadaver, Humans, Male, Tibia surgery, X-Ray Microtomography, Fractures, Bone surgery, Osteotomy methods, Talus surgery
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Background: Posterior talar body fractures are rare injuries without a consensus surgical approach. This study evaluates the accessible area of the talar dome through 2 posteromedial approach intervals (posteromedial [PM] and modified posteromedial [mPM]) both with and without distraction., Methods: Ten male cadaveric legs (5 matched pairs) were included. A PM approach, between flexor hallucis longus (FHL) and the tibial neurovascular bundle, and an mPM approach, between FHL and Achilles tendon, was performed on each pair. In total, 4 mm of distraction across the tibiotalar joint was applied with the foot held in neutral position. Accessible dome surface area (DSA) was outlined by drilling with a 1.6-mm Kirschner wire with and without distraction. Specimens were explanted and analyzed by micro-computed tomography with 3-dimensional reconstruction. Primary outcomes were total accessible DSA and sagittal plane access at predetermined intervals., Results: The PM approach allowed access to 19.1% of the talar DSA without distraction and 33.1% of the talar dome with distraction ( P < .001). The mPM approach provided access to 20.4% and 35.6% of the talar DSA without and with distraction ( P < .001). Both approaches demonstrated similar sagittal plane access at all intervals except the lateral border of the talus, where the mPM approach provided greater access both without distraction (20.5% vs 4.38%, P = .002) and with distraction (34.3% vs 17.8%, P = .02)., Conclusion: The mPM approach, using an interval between FHL and Achilles tendon, provides similar access to the posterior surface of talar dome and better sagittal plane access to the most lateral portion of the dome. The mPM interval provides the advantage of avoiding direct dissection of the tibial nerve or posterior tibial artery. Using an external fixator for distraction can improve talar dome visualization substantially., Level of Evidence: Level V, Cadaveric Study.
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- 2022
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32. Association Between Hindfoot Alignment and First Metatarsal Rotation.
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Bakshi N, Steadman J, Philippi M, Arena C, Leake R, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Rotation, Weight-Bearing, Hallux Valgus, Metatarsal Bones diagnostic imaging
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Background: The association between forefoot and hindfoot position for planus and cavus feet is fundamental to the treatment of these deformities. However, no studies have evaluated the association between hindfoot alignment and first metatarsal (M1) axial rotation. Understanding this possible relationship may help to understand the deformity and improve patient care. The purpose of this study is to determine a correlation between hindfoot alignment and metatarsal rotation as assessed by weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT)., Methods: Patients who underwent weightbearing plain radiography (WBPR) and WBCT between 2015 and 2018 were evaluated. Hindfoot alignment was measured with the calcaneal moment arm (CMA). M1 rotation was measured using the Kim and Saltzman angles. Patient subgroups were created according to the severity of valgus/varus hindfoot alignment. Statistical analyses were performed to evaluate for association between variables., Results: Among the 196 patient feet included in the study, the average CMA was 6.0 ± 16.2 mm. The average Kim and Saltzman angles were 7.7 ± 12.9 degrees and 2.8 ± 13.1 degrees, respectively. The average Meary angle was 182.0 ± 11.9 degrees. A moderately strong association was found between the CMA and the Saltzman ( r = 0.641, P < .01) and Kim angles ( r = 0.615, P < .01). Hindfoot valgus was associated with M1 pronation and hindfoot varus with M1 supination. Additionally, inverse relationships between the Meary angle and the Saltzman ( r = -0.600, P < .01) and Kim angles ( r = -0.529, P < .01) were identified., Conclusion: In this well-defined cohort, we found substantial correlation between hindfoot alignment and M1 rotation. Hindfoot valgus was associated with M1 pronation, and hindfoot varus was associated with M1 supination. Surgeons correcting cavovarus/planovalgus deformities should be aware of this association and evaluate the need for first-ray derotation., Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective cohort study.
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- 2022
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33. Mapping of Posterior Talar Dome Access Through Posteromedial Versus Posterolateral Approaches.
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DeKeyser GJ, Sripanich Y, O'Neill DC, Lenz AL, Haller JM, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- External Fixators, Humans, Leg, Osteotomy, X-Ray Microtomography, Talus diagnostic imaging, Talus surgery
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Objective: To evaluate the accessible area of the talar dome through 2 standard posterior approaches [posteromedial (PM) and posterolateral (PL)] with and without distraction., Methods: A standard PM or PL approach was performed with and without external fixator distraction on 12 through-knee cadaveric legs (6 matched pairs). The accessible area of the talar dome was outlined and imaged in a microcomputed tomography scanner to achieve 3D reconstructions of the accessible surface area. The study outcomes were accessible surface area of the talar dome in (1) total surface area and (2) sagittal plane distance of the talar dome at predetermined intervals., Results: The PM approach provided significantly more access to the talar dome than did the PL approach both with and without distraction (P < 0.001). The PM approach allowed access to 15.8% (SD = 4.7) of the talar dome without distraction and 26.4% (SD = 8.0, P < 0.001) of the talar dome with distraction. The PL approach provided access to 6.69% (SD = 2.69, P = 0.006 compared with PM) and 14.6% (SD = 6.24, P = 0.006 compared with PM) of the talar dome surface area without and with distraction. At the difficult to access posterocentral region (L50) of the talus, the PM approach without and with distraction allowed 26.7% (SD = 4.1) and 38.6% (SD = 5.6, P < 0.001) sagittal plane access compared with 18.7% (SD = 5.61, P = 0.03) and 27.5% (SD = 7.11, P = 0.003) through a PL approach., Conclusion: The PM approach provides greater access to the posterocentral and PM talus. Using an external fixator for distraction can improve intraoperative visualization by at least 40%. This study provides a roadmap that can help guide talar dome surgical access for treatment of posterior talus fractures and help determine when an approach that includes an osteotomy can be avoided., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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34. Complications of Hardware Removal.
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Kellam PJ, Harrast J, Weinberg M, Martin DF, Davidson NP, and Saltzman CL
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- Adult, Child, Humans, Postoperative Complications etiology, Retrospective Studies, United States epidemiology, Bone Diseases surgery, Device Removal adverse effects, Fractures, Bone surgery, Orthopedic Procedures instrumentation, Postoperative Complications epidemiology
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Background: While hardware removal may improve patient function, the procedure carries risks of unexpected outcomes. Despite being among the most commonly performed orthopaedic procedures, scant attention has been given to its complication profile., Methods: We queried the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery (ABOS) de-identified database of Part II surgical case lists from 2013 through 2019 for American Medical Association Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) implant-removal codes (20680, 20670, 22850, 22852, 22855, 26320). Hardware removal procedures that were performed without any other concurrent procedure ("HR-only procedures") were examined for associated complications., Results: In the 7 years analyzed, 13,089 HR-only procedures were performed, representing 2.1% (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.1% to 2.2%) of the total of 609,150 surgical procedures during that period. A complication was reported to have occurred in association with 1,256 procedures (9.6% [95% CI, 9.1% to 10.1%]), with surgical complications reported in association with 1,151 procedures (8.8% [95% CI, 8.3% to 9.3%]) and medical/anesthetic complications reported in association with 196 procedures (1.5% [95% CI, 1.3% to 1.7%]). Wound-healing delay/failure (2.1% [95% CI, 1.8% to 2.3%]) and infection (1.6% [95% CI, 1.4% to 1.8%]) were among the most commonly reported complications after HR-only procedures, but other serious events were reported as well, including unexpected reoperations (2.5% [95% CI, 2.2% to 2.7%]), unexpected readmissions (1.6% [95% CI, 1.4% to 1.8%]), continuing pain (95% CI, 1.2% [1.0% to 1.4%]), nerve injury (0.6% [95% CI, 0.4% to 0.7%]), bone fracture (0.5% [95% CI, 0.4% to 0.6%]), and life-threatening complications (0.4% [95% CI, 0.3% to 0.5%])., Conclusions: Hardware removal is one of the most commonly performed orthopaedic procedures and was associated with an overall complication rate of 9.6% (95% CI, 9.1% to 10.1%) in a cohort of recently trained orthopaedic surgeons in the United States. Although specific complications such as infection, refractures, and nerve damage were reported to have relatively low rates of occurrence, and associated life-threatening complications occurred rarely, surgeons and patients should be aware that hardware removal carries a definite risk., Level of Evidence: Therapeutic Level IV. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest forms are provided with the online version of the article (http://links.lww.com/JBJS/G661)., (Copyright © 2021 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.)
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- 2021
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35. Assessment of Hindfoot Alignment Comparing Weightbearing Radiography to Weightbearing Computed Tomography.
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Arena CB, Sripanich Y, Leake R, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Humans, Radiography, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Weight-Bearing, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Background: Hindfoot alignment view (HAV) radiographs are widely utilized for 2-dimensional (2D) radiographic assessment of hindfoot alignment; however, the development of weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT) may provide more accurate methods of quantifying 3-dimensional (3D) hindfoot alignment. The aim of this study was to compare the 2D calcaneal moment arm measurements on HAV radiographs with WBCT., Methods: This retrospective cohort study included 375 consecutive patients with both HAV radiographs and WBCT imaging. Measurement of the 2D hindfoot alignment moment arm was compared between both imaging modalities. The potential confounding influence of valgus/varus/neutral alignment, presence of hardware, and motion artifact were further analyzed., Results: The intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) of interobserver and intraobserver reliability for measurements with both imaging modalities were excellent. Both modalities were highly correlated (Spearman coefficient, 0.930; P < .001). HAV radiographs exhibited a mean calcaneal moment arm difference of 3.9 mm in the varus direction compared with WBCT (95% CI, -4.9 to 12.8). The difference of hindfoot alignment between both modalities was comparable in subgroups with neutral/valgus/varus alignment, presence of hardware, and motion artifact., Conclusion: Both HAV radiographs and WBCT are highly reliable and highly correlated imaging methods for assessing hindfoot alignment. Measurements were not influenced by severe malalignment, the presence of hardware, or motion artifact on WBCT. On average, HAV radiographs overestimated 3.9 mm of varus alignment as compared with WBCT., Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective comparative study.
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- 2021
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36. The Agility Total Ankle Arthroplasty: A Concise Follow-up at a Minimum of 20 Years.
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Bedard N, Saltzman CL, Den Hartog T, Carlson S, Callaghan J, Alvine G, and Alvine F
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- Ankle, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Prosthesis Design, Prosthesis Failure, Reoperation, Retrospective Studies, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Ankle, Joint Prosthesis
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Background: Between 1984 and 1994, a single surgeon performed 132 primary cementless total ankle replacements using the Agility total arthroplasty system. The purpose of this study was to report on the 20-year follow-up, which we believe is the first study with this length of follow-up., Methods: Living patients were contacted and interviewed to determine the status of their implant (revised or unrevised) and to answer a simple questionnaire concerning overall satisfaction, pain, and functional improvement, as in a previous study. Thirty-three (26.2%) patients with 33 (25%) ankles of the original series were alive at a minimum of 20 years postoperatively, with a median follow-up of 22 years. They were asked to return to the office for standing anteroposterior and lateral ankle and foot radiographs or to send these radiographs if performed elsewhere. Radiographs were evaluated for radiolucencies around the components and subsidence (talar component) or migration (tibial component) of components., Results: Seventeen (13.5%) ankles of the 126 available for follow-up, including 5 (15.2%) ankles in living patients, had undergone revision ( n = 10) or arthrodesis ( n = 7) for loosening. One additional ankle was revised for infection and 1 for talar component malposition; thus, 19 (15.1%) ankles were revised., Conclusion: These results should provide a 20-year benchmark for newer total ankle arthroplasty designs when a similar length of follow-up becomes available., Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective cohort study.
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- 2021
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37. Normative Distribution of First Metatarsal Axial Rotation.
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Steadman J, Bakshi N, Arena C, Leake R, Barg A, and Saltzman CL
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- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Rotation, Hallux Valgus diagnostic imaging, Metatarsal Bones diagnostic imaging
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Background: First metatarsal (M1) axial rotation is recognized as a clinically relevant component of hallux valgus deformity. Methods to realign the M1 in 3 dimensions have been developed. One goal of these operations is to restore normal rotation of the first ray. The aim of this study is to provide estimates for the normal distribution of M1 rotation in patients without relevant anatomic pathology., Methods: Using stringent clinical and radiographic criteria, we evaluated a set of plain radiograph and weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT) images of 62 feet from a consecutive patient database. Subjects included had normal foot alignment without bunion symptoms. M1 rotation of each foot was measured using 2 unique methods (Saltzman et al and Kim et al methods). Measurement of rotation was performed by 2 observers from coronal WBCT images. Mean values and confidence intervals (CIs) of M1 rotation were calculated for each method. Inter- and intraobserver reliability values were also reported., Results: Mean M1 rotation values of 2.1 degrees (95% CI: 0.9-3.4) and 6.1 degrees (95% CI: 4.4-7.8) were identified using the Saltzman et al and Kim et al methods, respectively. Inter- and intraobserver reliability values were interpreted as excellent for both methods., Conclusion: In this study, we describe the natural distribution of the M1 axial rotation in subjects without bunion or other identifiable bony foot deformities. This information should provide a normative reference for surgeons correcting rotational issues of the first metatarsal., Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective cohort study.
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- 2021
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38. Linking Oswestry Disability Index to the PROMIS pain interference CAT with equipercentile methods.
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Tang X, Schalet BD, Hung M, Brodke DS, Saltzman CL, and Cella D
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- Humans, Pain, Pain Measurement, Prospective Studies, Disability Evaluation, Patient Reported Outcome Measures
- Abstract
Background Context: When different health care providers use different patient-reported outcome (PRO) instruments, it is challenging to integrate findings that describe particular patient groups or to establish treatment effectiveness across studies. It is therefore critical to develop accurate ways to convert scores between various instruments for clinicians and researchers to make comparisons across health outcomes., Purpose: To develop a common metric so that scores on the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and scores on the PROMIS Physical Function can be converted interchangeably., Study Design/setting: Data were collected from a prospective study. A single-group linking design was used., Patient Sample: The study population included 9020 patients presented to an orthopedic spine clinic from November 2013 to March 2019., Outcome Measures: Patients completed the ODI and the PROMIS Pain Interference scale delivered by Computerized Adaptive Testing (CAT) at the same time prior to their visit with a spine clinician., Methods: Equipercentile linking methods based on log-linear smoothing approach and non-smoothing approach were used to establish a common metric across the two measures., Results: The two measures assess the similar contruct of pain. The correlation between the scores of the ODI and the PROMIS PI was 0.81. The standardized Root Expected Mean Square Difference (REMSD) values for gender, ethnic, and racial groups ranged from 3.55% to 4.81%. Hence, the assumptions for the equipercentile linking method were met. The crosswalk derived linked scores based on the log-linear smoothing method yielded small deviations (Δ = 0.09) from the observed scores. We then identified linked PROMIS-PI scores corresponding to the benchmark ODI scores for the five disability levels and for various categories of patients., Conclusions: This study is the first to create crosswalks to interchangeably convert scores between the ODI to the PROMIS-PI in a large population of spine patients using the equipercentile linking method. The results of this study provide confidence in the validity and usefulness of the derived crosswalks based on the equipercentile linking approach. The crosswalks are helpful for comparing new and old studies on the two measures and identifying benchmark scores for various diseases and disability levels., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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39. Short Reports.
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Saltzman CL
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- 2021
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40. Reliability of measurements assessing the Lisfranc joint using weightbearing computed tomography imaging.
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Sripanich Y, Weinberg MW, Krähenbühl N, Rungprai C, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Adult, Aged, Humans, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Foot Joints diagnostic imaging, Foot Joints physiology, Ligaments, Articular diagnostic imaging, Ligaments, Articular physiology, Physical Examination standards, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Weight-Bearing physiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Subtle Lisfranc joint injuries remain challenging to diagnose in clinical practice. Although of questionable accuracy, bilateral weightbearing radiographs are considered the current gold standard to assess these injuries. However, weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT), which provides clearer visualization of bony landmarks, can also be used for evaluation. This study aims to design a protocol that reliably measures the distance between the medial cuneiform (C1) and second metatarsal (M2) to assess the Lisfranc joint using WBCT imaging., Methods: Two unique methods of measuring the C1-M2 distance were designed that localize the center of the interosseous Lisfranc ligament (ILL, reference point). This reference point was located by (I) measuring a specific distance at the M2 base, or (II) approximating from nearby bony landmarks, on both axial (Ax) and coronal (Cor) WBCT images. Four parameters (I-Ax, I-Cor, II-Ax, and II-Cor) were evaluated for each of 96 specimens. Measurements were recorded by three independent observers and repeated for inter- and intra-observer agreement., Results: In total, 96 patient image series were included and assessed in our study with an average age of 46 (19-66, SD 16.1) and average BMI of 25.8 (17.8-30.5, SD 4.3). I-Ax showed excellent agreement for intra-observer evaluation (R = 0.802) and good agreement for inter-observer evaluation (R = 0.727). I-Cor demonstrated excellent inter- (R = 0.814) and intra-observer (R = 0.840) agreement. Good agreement was found for both II-Ax and II-Cor for both intra- (R = 0.730, R = 0.708) and inter-observer (R = 0.705, R = 0.645) evaluation., Conclusion: Measuring the C1-M2 joint space with coronal WBCT imaging through a protocol that localizes the ILL is reproducible, simple, and can potentially be utilized clinically to evaluate the Lisfranc joint.
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- 2021
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41. Anatomy and biomechanics of the Lisfranc ligamentous complex: A systematic literature review.
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Sripanich Y, Steadman J, Krähenbühl N, Rungprai C, Saltzman CL, Lenz AL, and Barg A
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- Biomechanical Phenomena, Biophysics, Cadaver, Humans, Foot Joints, Ligaments, Articular
- Abstract
Lisfranc injuries are challenging to treat and can have a detrimental effect on active individuals. Over the past decade researchers have investigated methods for the reconstruction of the Lisfranc ligamentous complex (LLC) to preserve its functional stability and mobility. To aid in this innovation, this study presents the current understanding of the anatomical and biomechanical characteristics of the LLC through a systematic review. Three medical databases (PubMed, Scopus, and Embase) were searched from inception through July 2019. Original studies investigating the anatomy and/or biomechanical properties of the LLC were considered for inclusion. Data recorded from each study included: number of cadavers, number of feet, gender, laterality, age, type of specimen, measurement methods, reported ligamentous bundles, ligament origins and insertions, geometric characteristics, and biomechanical properties of the LLC. The Quality Appraisal for Cadaveric Studies (QUACS) scale was used to assess the methodologic quality of included articles. Eight cadaveric studies investigating the LLC were included out of 1204 screened articles. Most articles described the LLC as three distinct structures: the dorsal- (DLL), interosseous- (ILL), and plantar- (PLL) Lisfranc Ligaments. The ILL had the largest thickness and insertional area of osseous attachment. Biomechanically, the ILL also had the highest stiffness and resistance to load prior to failure when loaded parallel to its fiber orientation. Current knowledge of the anatomical and biomechanical properties of the LLC are presented and highlight its significant role of stabilizing the tarsometatarsal articulation. Appreciating the biomechanical characteristics of the ILL may improve clinical insight in managing LLC injuries., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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42. Limitations of accessibility of the talar dome with different open surgical approaches.
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Sripanich Y, Dekeyser G, Steadman J, Rungprai C, Haller J, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Achilles Tendon surgery, Ankle surgery, External Fixators, Fibula surgery, Humans, Tibia surgery, Osteotomy methods, Talus surgery
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Purpose: The aim of this study is to systematically review the current, relevant literature and provide a thorough understanding of the various open surgical approaches utilized to gain access to the talar dome for treatment of osteochondral lesions. Realizing the limits of access from soft tissue exposures and osteotomies, with and without external distraction, will help surgeons to select the appropriate approach for each individual clinical situation., Methods: A literature search was performed using three major medical databases: PubMed (MEDLINE), Scopus, and Embase. The Quality Appraisal for Cadaveric Studies (QUACS) scale was used to assess the methodological quality of each included study., Results: Of 3108 reviewed articles, nine cadaveric studies (113 limbs from 83 cadavers) evaluating the accessibility of the talar dome were included in the final analysis. Most of these (7/9 studies) investigated talar dome access in the context of treating osteochondral lesions of the talus (OLTs) requiring perpendicular visualization of the involved region. Five surgical approaches (anteromedial; AM, anterolateral; AL, posteromedial; PM, posterolateral; PL, and direct posterior via an Achilles tendon splitting; DP), four types of osteotomy (anterolateral tibial, medial malleolar, distal fibular, and plafondplasty), and two methods of distraction (Hintermann retractor and external fixator) were used among the included studies. The most commonly used methods quantified talar access in the sagittal plane (6/9 studies, 66.7%). The greatest exposure of the talar dome can be achieved perpendicularly by performing an additional malleolar osteotomy (90.9% for lateral, and 100% for medial). The methodological quality of all included studies was determined to be satisfactory., Conclusion: Gaining perpendicular access to the central portion of the talar dome, measured in the sagittal plane, has clear limitations via soft tissue approaches either medially or laterally from the anterior or posterior aspects of the ankle. It is possible to access a greater talar dome area in a non-perpendicular fashion, especially from the posterior soft tissue approach. Various types of osteotomies can provide greater accessibility to the talar dome. This systematic review can help surgeons to select the appropriate approach for treatment of OLTs in each individual patient preoperatively., Level of Evidence: Level IV.
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- 2021
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43. Statistical shape modeling of the talocrural joint using a hybrid multi-articulation joint approach.
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Lenz AL, Krähenbühl N, Peterson AC, Lisonbee RJ, Hintermann B, Saltzman CL, Barg A, and Anderson AE
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- Adult, Biomechanical Phenomena, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Anatomic, Models, Statistical, Models, Theoretical, Motion, Principal Component Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Tibia anatomy & histology, Weight-Bearing, Ankle Joint anatomy & histology, Ankle Joint diagnostic imaging, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Historically, conventional radiographs have been the primary tool to morphometrically evaluate the talocrural joint, which is comprised of the distal tibia, distal fibula, and proximal talus. More recently, high-resolution volumetric imaging, including computed tomography (CT), has enabled the generation of three-dimensional (3D) reconstructions of the talocrural joint. Weightbearing cone-beam CT (WBCT) technology provides additional benefit to assess 3D spatial relationships and joint congruency while the patient is load bearing. In this study we applied statistical shape modeling, a computational morphometrics technique, to objectively quantify anatomical variation, joint level coverage, joint space distance, and congruency at the talocrural joint. Shape models were developed from segmented WBCT images and included the distal tibia, distal fibula, and full talus. Key anatomical variation across subjects included the fibular notch on the tibia, talar trochlea sagittal plane rate of curvature, tibial plafond curvature with medial malleolus prominence, and changes in the fibular shaft diameter. The shape analysis also revealed a highly congruent talocrural joint with minimal inter-individual morphometric differences at the articular regions. These data are helpful to improve understanding of ankle joint pathologies and to guide refinement of operative treatments.
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- 2021
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44. First Metatarsal Rotation in Hallux Valgus Deformity.
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Steadman J, Barg A, and Saltzman CL
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- Humans, Rotation, Bunion, Hallux, Hallux Valgus diagnostic imaging, Hallux Valgus surgery, Metatarsal Bones diagnostic imaging, Metatarsal Bones surgery
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Rotation of the first metatarsal (M1) as a potential etiological factor of hallux valgus (HV) deformity was described relatively early in the description of HV pathoanatomy. However, because biplanar radiographs have been the standard method for imaging HV, clinicians primarily developed measurement methods and corrective operations confined to 2 dimensions, medial-lateral and inferior-superior. Recently, as our understanding of HV pathoanatomy has further developed, aided in part by advanced imaging technology, M1 rotation about its axis ("axial rotation") and its implications for HV deformity and treatment has reemerged. The goal of this review is to summarize M1 rotation in HV from a historical perspective, to present the current understanding of its potential role in the etiology/pathogenesis of HV, and to summarize relevant imaging and operative considerations with respect to M1 rotation. Level of Evidence: Level III, systematic review.
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- 2021
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45. Comparative assessment of midfoot osteoarthritis diagnostic sensitivity using weightbearing computed tomography vs weightbearing plain radiography.
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Steadman J, Sripanich Y, Rungprai C, Mills MK, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Humans, Radiography, Retrospective Studies, Weight-Bearing, Osteoarthritis diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Abstract
Purpose: Accuracy in diagnosing osteoarthritis in the midfoot using weightbearing plain radiography (WBPR) remains questionable due to the overlapping osseous architecture present, occluding visualization. Weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT), providing clearer bony landmark identification and joint space visualization, can also be used for evaluation. The aim of this project is to perform a standardized retrospective intra-patient analysis identifying the discrepancy of midfoot osteoarthritis diagnosis and osteoarthritis severity grading between WBPR and WBCT., Methods and Materials: A cohort of 302 patient feet was acquired from an internal, consecutive patient database using detailed inclusion criteria. The musculoskeletal radiologist interpretation of the WBCT and WBPR of each specimen was then assessed for any direct diagnosis or mention of osteoarthritic signs in specific articulations of 3 midfoot joint groups (Chopart, "central", and tarsometatarsal). WBPR sensitivity and specificity metrics were calculated with WBCT considered the gold standard for comparison., Results: From the WBPR radiologist interpretation, we found diagnostic sensitivity of 72.5 % and specificity of 87.9 % for Chopart joints; 61.5 % sensitivity, and 96.1 % specificity for central joints; and 68.4 % sensitivity, and 92.9 % specificity for tarsometatarsal joints. The severity of degenerative changes was also consistently underestimated when interpreted from WBPR relative to WBCT., Conclusions: In this series, midfoot osteoarthritis was often undetected on WBPR. WBCT imaging facilitates an earlier, more reliable diagnosis and grading of midfoot osteoarthritis relative to WBPR., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2021
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46. Editorial.
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Saltzman CL
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- 2021
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47. Alignment of the hindfoot in total knee arthroplasty: a systematic review of clinical and radiological outcomes.
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Burssens A, De Roos D, Barg A, Welck MJ, Krähenbühl N, Saltzman CL, and Victor J
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- Biomechanical Phenomena, Humans, Ankle Joint abnormalities, Ankle Joint diagnostic imaging, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee, Bone Malalignment diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Aims: Patients with a deformity of the hindfoot present a particular challenge when performing total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The literature contains little information about the relationship between TKA and hindfoot alignment. This systematic review aimed to determine from both clinical and radiological studies whether TKA would alter a preoperative hindfoot deformity and whether the outcome of TKA is affected by the presence of a postoperative hindfoot deformity., Methods: A systematic literature search was performed in the databases PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science. Search terms consisted of "total knee arthroplasty/replacement" combined with "hindfoot/ankle alignment". Inclusion criteria were all English language studies analyzing the association between TKA and the alignment of the hindfoot, including the clinical or radiological outcomes. Exclusion criteria consisted of TKA performed with a concomitant extra-articular osteotomy and case reports or expert opinions. An assessment of quality was conducted using the modified Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies (MINORS). The review was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines and registered in the PROSPERO database (CRD42019106980)., Results: A total of 17 studies were found to be eligible for review. They included six prospective and ten retrospective studies, and one case-control study. The effects of TKA showed a clinical improvement in the hindfoot deformity in three studies, but did not if there was osteoarthritis (OA) of the ankle (one study) or a persistent deformity of the knee (one study). The radiological alignment of the hindfoot corrected in 11 studies, but did not in the presence of a rigid hindfoot varus deformity (in two studies). The effects of a hindfoot deformity on TKA included a clinical association with instability of the knee in one study, and a shift in the radiological weightbearing axis in two studies. The mean MINORS score was 9.4 out of 16 (7 to 12)., Conclusion: TKA improves both the function and alignment of the hindfoot in patients with a preoperative deformity of the hindfoot. This may not apply if there is a persistent deformity of the knee, a rigid hindfoot varus deformity, or OA of the ankle. Moreover, a persistent deformity of the hindfoot may adversely affect the stability and longevity of a TKA. These findings should be interpreted with caution due to the moderate methodological quality of the studies which were included. Therefore, further prospective studies are needed in order to determine at which stage correction of a hindfoot deformity is required to optimize the outcome of a TKA. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2021;103-B(1):87-97.
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- 2021
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48. Response to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic by the Spine Division at a Level-I Academic Referral Center.
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DeKeyser GJ, Brodke DS, Saltzman CL, and Lawrence BD
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- Academic Medical Centers organization & administration, Elective Surgical Procedures, Humans, Occupational Health, Operating Rooms, Orthopedic Procedures, Orthopedics education, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling, Professional Staff Committees, SARS-CoV-2, Spinal Diseases classification, Telemedicine, Triage, COVID-19 prevention & control, Occupational Exposure prevention & control, Orthopedics organization & administration, Patient Selection, Spinal Diseases surgery
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a ubiquitous health concern and a global pandemic. In an effort to slow the disease spread and protect valuable healthcare resources, cessation of nonessential surgery, including many orthopaedic procedures, has become commonplace. This crisis has created a unique situation in the care of spine patients as we must balance the urgency of patient evaluation, surgical intervention, and continued training against the risk of disease exposure and resource management. The spine division of an orthopaedic surgery department has taken an active role in enacting protocol changes in anticipation of COVID-19. In the initial 4 weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic the spine division went from an average of 60.4 cases to 10 cases during the same timeframe. Clinic visits decreased from 417.4 to 322 with new patient visits decreasing from 28% to 20%. Three hundred eighteen of the 322 (98.7%) clinic visits were performed via telehealth. Although these changes have been forced upon us by necessity, we feel that our division and department will emerge in a more responsive, agile, and stronger state. As we look to the coming months and beyond, it will be important to continue to adapt to the changing landscape during unprecedented times.
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- 2020
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49. Morphologic analysis of the subtalar joint using statistical shape modeling.
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Krähenbühl N, Lenz AL, Lisonbee RJ, Peterson AC, Atkins PR, Hintermann B, Saltzman CL, Anderson AE, and Barg A
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- Adult, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Models, Statistical, Subtalar Joint diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT) enables visualization of the foot and ankle as patients stand under load. Clinical measurements of WBCT images are generally limited to two-dimensions, which reduces the ability to quantify complex morphology of individual osseous structures as well as the alignment between two or more bones. The shape and orientation of the healthy/normal subtalar joint, in particular, is not well-understood, which makes it very difficult to diagnose subtalar pathoanatomy. Herein, we employed statistical shape modeling to evaluate three-dimensional (3D) shape variation, coverage, space, and congruency of the subtalar joint using WBCT data of 27 asymptomatic healthy individuals. The four most relevant findings were: (A) talar and calcaneal anatomical differences were found regarding the presence of (a) the talar posterior process, (b) calcaneal pitch, and (c) curvature of the calcaneal posterior facet; (B) the talar posterior facet articular surface area was significantly greater than the calcaneal posterior facet articular surface area; (C) the posterior facet varied in joint space distance, whereas the anteromedial facet was even; and (D) the posterior and anteromedial facet of the subtalar joint was consistently congruent. Despite considerable shape variation across the population, the posterior and anteromedial articular facets of the subtalar joint were consistently congruent. Results provide a detailed 3D analysis of the subtalar joint under a weightbearing condition in a healthy population which can be used for comparisons to pathological patient populations. The described SSM approach also shows promise for clinical evaluation of the subtalar joint from 3D surface reconstructions of WBCT images., (© 2020 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2020
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50. Change in the First Cuneiform-Second Metatarsal Distance After Simulated Ligamentous Lisfranc Injury Evaluated by Weightbearing CT Scans.
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Sripanich Y, Weinberg M, Krähenbühl N, Rungprai C, Saltzman CL, and Barg A
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- Adult, Aged, Cadaver, Foot Bones diagnostic imaging, Foot Bones injuries, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Young Adult, Joint Instability diagnostic imaging, Ligaments, Articular diagnostic imaging, Ligaments, Articular injuries, Tarsal Joints diagnostic imaging, Tarsal Joints injuries, Weight-Bearing physiology
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to investigate the widening between the first cuneiform (C1) and second metatarsal (M2) in a Lisfranc ligamentous complex (LLC) joint injury model subjected to successive ligament dissections evaluated by weightbearing computed tomography (CT) scans., Methods: Twenty-four intact cadaveric feet served as the control (condition 1). Each component of the LLC (dorsal, interosseous, and plantar ligaments-conditions 2, 3, and 4, respectively) were then sequentially dissected. The specimens were equally randomized to 1 of 3 additional dissections (first or second tarsometatarsal [TMT] joint capsule or first-second intercuneiform ligament [ICL]-conditions 5a, 5b, and 5c, respectively). One additional ligament was then randomly transected (eg, condition 6ac-transection of the first TMT capsule and ICL). Finally, the remaining ligament was transected (condition 7). After each dissection, CT scans were acquired under nonweightbearing (NWB, 0 kg), partial-weightbearing (PWB, 40 kg), and full-weightbearing (FWB, 80 kg) conditions. The distance between the lateral border of C1 and the medial border of M2 was assessed to evaluate diastasis. Linear regressions with 95% CIs and converted q values were used to compare the measured data., Results: No significant differences were found within the control. In condition 4, an average axial plane widening relative to control of 1.6 mm (95% CI, 1.5-1.8) and 2.1 mm (95% CI, 1.9-2.2) was observed under PWB and FWB. A coronal plane widening of 1.5 mm (95% CI, 1.3-1.6) and 1.9 mm (95% CI, 1.7-2.1) under PWB and FWB, respectively, was measured. A 95% CI of at least a 2-mm widening during PWB was demonstrated in 5c, 6ac, 6bc, and 7., Conclusions: Weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT) scans were used to detect ligamentous Lisfranc injuries in a cadaveric model. Relative axial widening greater than 1.5 mm under PWB conditions could indicate a complete LLC injury. Complete transection of the intercuneiform 1-2 ligament was required to detect a 2-mm widening in the nonweightbearing condition., Clinical Relevance: This study provides insight on the detection of various severities of LLC injuries using WBCT imaging.
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- 2020
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