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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 500 - 500
1 Aug 2008
Maffulli N Ferran NA Oliva F Testa V
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Background: Recurrent peroneal tendon subluxation is uncommon. We report the results of a delayed anatomic repair using suture anchors. Using a case series we tested the null hypothesis that there are no differences between pre- and post-operative status following anatomical repair of the superior peroneal retinaculum.

Methods: In the period 1996 to 2001, we operated on 14 patients (all males; average age 25.3 ± 6.3 years, range 18–37) with traumatic recurrent unilateral peroneal tendon subluxation, with a followed up of 38 ± 3 (range 22 to 47) months.

Results: No patient experienced a further episode of peroneal tendon subluxation, and all had returned to their normal activities. Maximum calf circumference, functional ability, peak torque, total work and average power of plantar flexion were always lower in the operated leg, but the differences did not reach statistical significance. The AOFAS Ankle-Hindfoot Scale increased significantly from 54.3 ± 11.4 to 94.5 ± 6.4 (p = 0.03), with five patients reporting a fully normal ankle.

Conclusion: If an anatomic approach to treating the pathology is utilised, reattachment of the superior retinaculum is a most appropriate technique. It returns patients to a high level of physical activity, and gives high rate of satisfactory results both objectively and subjectively. Randomised control trials may be the way forward in determining the best surgical management method. However, the relative rarity of the condition and the large number of techniques make such a study difficult.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 230 - 230
1 Jul 2008
Maffulli N Testa V Capasso G Oliva F Sullo A
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Objective: To report the outcome of surgery for chronic recalcitrant Achilles tendinopathy in sedentary and athletic subjects.

Design: Case control study

Participants: We matched each of the 61 non-athletic patients with a diagnosis of tendinopathy of the Achilles tendon with an athletic patient with tendinopathy of the main body of the Achilles tendon of the same sex who was within two years of age at the time of operation. A match according was possible for 56 patients (23 males and 33 females). 48 sedentary subjects and 45 athletic subjects agreed to participate.

Main Outcome Measure: Outcome of surgery, return to sport, complication rate.

Results: Non-athletic patients were shorter and heavier than athletic patients. They had greater BMI, calf circumference, side-to-side calf circumference differences, and subcutaneous body fat than athletic patients. Of the 48 sedentary patients, only 25 reported an excellent or good result. Of these, three had undergone a further exploration of the Achilles tendon. The remaining patients could not return to their normal levels of activity. In all of them, pain significantly interfered with daily activities.

Conclusions: Non-athletic subjects experience more prolonged recovery, more complications, and a greater risk of further surgery than athletic subjects with recalcitrant Achilles tendinopathy. Key words: Achilles tendinopathy, surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 165 - 165
1 Mar 2006
Walley G Maffulli N Testa V Capasso G Sullo A Ewen S Benazzo F King J Sayana M
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Purpose To ascertain whether there are differences in the histopathological appearance of tendinopathic Achilles and patellar tendons.

Methods In males, we studied biopsies from tendinopathic Achilles (n = 28; average age 34.1 years) and patellar tendons (n = 28; average age 32.1), and Achilles tendons (n = 21; average age 61.8 years) from deceased patients with no known tendon pathology, and patellar tendons (n = 15; average age 28.3) from patients undergoing anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Haematoxylineosin stained slides were interpreted using a semi-quantitative grading scale (0: normal to 3: maximally abnormal) for fibre structure; fibre arrangement; rounding of the nuclei; regional variations in cellularity; increased vascularity; decreased collagen stainability; hyalinisation. All slides were assessed blindly twice, the agreement between two readings ranging from 0.170 to 0.750 (Kappa statistics).

Results The highest mean score of tendinopathic Achilles tendons was not significantly different from that of tendinopathic patellar tendons (11.6 ± 5 and 10.4 ± 3, respectively). The ability to differentiate between an Achilles tendon and a patellar tendon was low.

Conclusions Tendinopathic Achilles and patellar tendons show a similar histological picture. It was not possible to identify whether a specimen had been harvested from an Achilles or a patellar tendon on the basis of histological examination. The general pattern of degeneration was common to both tendinopathic Achilles and patellar tendons. A common, as yet unidentified, etio-pathological mechanism may have acted on both these tendon populations.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 156 - 156
1 Feb 2003
Maffulli N Kenward M Testa V Capasso G Regine R King J
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We evaluated sensitivity, specificity, reproducibility and predictive value of palpation, of the painful arc sign, and of the ‘Royal London Hospital test’ in 10 patients with Achilles tendinopathy, and in 14 asymptomatic subjects using a test-retest study design.

Ten male athletes on the waiting list for exploration of one of their Achilles tendons for tendinopathy of the main body of the tenon attended a special clinic. Each was invited to bring at least one athlete of the same sex in the same discipline aged within two years of themselves, with no history and no symptoms of AT. A total of 14 controls were thus recruited.

Pain and tenderness following performance of palpation, the painful arc sign, and the ‘Royal London Hospital test’ were recorded.

There were no statistically significant differences at the 5% level among the effects of investigator or between morning and afternoon measurements for any of the three assessment methods. There was no evidence of a difference of the three assessment methods (p> 0.05). When the three methods were combined, the overall sensitivity was 0.586 (CI 0.469 – 0.741) and the overall specificity was 0.833 (CI 0.758 – 0.889).

In patients with tendinopathy of the Achilles tendon with a tender area of intratendinous swelling which moves with the tendon and whose tenderness significantly decreases or disappears when the tendon is put under tension, a clinical diagnosis of tendinopathy can be formulated, with a high positive predictive chance that the tendon will show ultrasonographic and histological features of tendinopathy.