The April 2024 Foot & Ankle Roundup360 looks at: Safety of arthroscopy combined with radial extracorporeal shockwave therapy for osteochondritis of the talus; Bipolar allograft transplantation of the ankle; Identifying risk factors for osteonecrosis after talar fracture; Balancing act: immediate versus delayed weightbearing in ankle fracture recovery; Levelling the field: proximal supination osteotomy’s efficacy in severe and super-severe hallux valgus; Restoring balance: how adjusting the tibiotalar joint line influences movement after ankle surgery.
Lengthening of the conjoined tendon of the gastrocnemius
aponeurosis and soleus fascia is frequently used in the treatment
of equinus deformities in children and adults. The Vulpius procedure
as described in most orthopaedic texts is a division of the conjoined
tendon in the shape of an inverted V. However, transverse division
was also described by Vulpius and Stoffel, and has been reported
in some clinical studies. We studied the anatomy and biomechanics of transverse division
of the conjoined tendon in 12 human cadavers (24 legs). Transverse
division of the conjoined tendon resulted in predictable, controlled
lengthening of the gastrocsoleus muscle-tendon unit. The lengthening
achieved was dependent both on the level of the cut in the conjoined
tendon and division of the midline raphé. Division at a proximal
level resulted in a mean lengthening of 15.2 mm ( Cite this article:
Lengthening of the gastrocsoleus for equinus deformity is commonly performed in orthopaedic surgery. The aim of this study was to describe the precise details of each surgical procedure and assess each biomechanically in cadaver models. The surgical anatomy of the gastrocsoleus was investigated and standardized approaches were developed for the procedures described by Baumann, Strayer, Vulpius, Baker, Hoke and White. The biomechanical characteristics of these six procedures were then compared, in three randomized trials, in formalin preserved, human cadaver legs. The lengthening procedures were performed and a measured dorsiflexion force was applied across the metatarsal heads using a torque dynamometer. Lengthening of the gastrocsoleus was measured directly, by measuring the gap between the ends of the fascia or tendon.Purpose of Study
Description of Methods