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Research

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AN ABSENT ANKLE REFLEX



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Abstract

We assessed the prevalence of abnormal ankle reflexes in 1074 adult patients attending orthopaedic clinics and related it to age. Those with possible pathological causes of reflex loss were excluded.

The absence of one or both reflexes was significantly related to increasing age; all patients under 30 years had both reflexes. Few had absent reflexes between 30 and 40 years, but over 40 years, the proportion with both reflexes absent increased rapidly from 5% (40 to 50 years) to 80% (90 to 100 years). Unilateral absence did not show the same pattern of increase being 3% to 5% at 40 to 60 years and 7% to 10% at over 60 years.

Our results suggest that a significant number of ‘normal’ adults have unilateral absence of an ankle reflex, but this finding is rare enough to be a definite clinical sign, irrespective of age.


Correspondence should be sent to Mr M. G. Bowditch at 41 Saffron Road, Histon, Cambridge CB4 4LJ, UK.

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