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2.
Skeletal Radiol ; 52(12): 2387-2397, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37130960

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess test-retest reliability and correlation of weight-bearing (WB) and non-weight-bearing (NWB) cone beam CT (CBCT) foot measurements and Foot Posture Index (FPI) MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty healthy participants (age 43.11±11.36, 15 males, 5 females) were CBCT-scanned in February 2019 on two separate days on one foot in both WB and NWB positions. Three radiology observers measured the navicular bone position. Plantar (ΔNAVplantar) and medial navicular displacements (ΔNAVmedial) were calculated as a measure of foot posture changes under loading. FPI was assessed by two rheumatologists on the same two days. FPI is a clinical measurement of foot posture with 3 rearfoot and 3 midfoot/forefoot scores. Test-retest reproducibility was determined for all measurements. CBCT was correlated to FPI total and subscores. RESULTS: Intra- and interobserver reliabilities for navicular position and FPI were excellent (intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) .875-.997). In particular, intraobserver (ICC .0.967-1.000) and interobserver reliabilities (ICC .946-.997) were found for CBCT navicular height and medial position. Interobserver reliability of ΔNAVplantar was excellent (ICC .926 (.812; .971); MDC 2.22), whereas the ΔNAVmedial was fair-good (ICC .452 (.385; .783); MDC 2.42 mm). Using all observers' measurements, we could calculate mean ΔNAVplantar (4.25±2.08 mm) and ΔNAVmedial (1.55±0.83 mm). We demonstrated a small day-day difference in ΔNAVplantar (0.64 ±1.13mm; p<.05), but not for ΔNAVmedial (0.04 ±1.13mm; p=n.s.). Correlation of WBCT (WB navicular height - ΔNAVmedial) with total clinical FPI scores and FPI subscores, respectively, showed high correlation (ρ: -.706; ρ: -.721). CONCLUSION: CBCT and FPI are reliable measurements of foot posture, with a high correlation between the two measurements.


Subject(s)
Foot , Posture , Male , Female , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Foot/diagnostic imaging , Cone-Beam Computed Tomography , Weight-Bearing
3.
PLOS Digit Health ; 2(5): e0000221, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37186574

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Acute lateral ankle sprains (LAS) account for 4-5% of all Emergency Department (ED) visits. Few patients receive the recommended care of exercise rehabilitation. A simple solution is an exercise app for mobile devices, which can deliver tailored and real-time adaptive exercise programs. PURPOSE: The purpose of this pilot study was to investigate the use and preliminary effect of an app-based exercise program in patients with LAS seen in the Emergency Department at a public hospital. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used an app that delivers evidence-based exercise rehabilitation for LAS using algorithm-controlled progression. Participants were recruited from the ED and followed for four months. Data on app-use and preliminary effect were collected continuously through the exercise app and weekly text-messages. Baseline and follow-up data were collected though an online questionnaire. Semi-structured interviews were performed after participants stopped using the app. Results: Health care professionals provided 485 patients with study information and exercise equipment. Of those, 60 participants chose to enroll in the study and 43 became active users. The active users completed a median of 7 exercise sessions. Most of the active users were very satisfied or satisfied (79%-93%) with the app and 95.7% would recommend it to others. The interviews showed that ankle sprains were considered an innocuous injury that would recover by itself. Several app users expressed they felt insufficiently informed from the ED health care professionals. Only 39% felt recovered when they stopped exercising, and 33% experienced a recurrent sprain in the study period. Conclusion: In this study, only few patients with LAS became active app users after receiving information in the ED about a free app-based rehabilitation program. We speculate the reason for this could be the perception that LAS is an innocuous injury. Most of the patients starting training were satisfied with the app, although few completed enough exercise sessions to realistically impact clinical recovery. Interestingly more than half of the participants did not feel fully recovered when they stopped exercising and one third experienced a recurrent sprain. TRIAL-IDENTIFIERS: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03550274, preprint (open access): https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.01.31.22269313v1.

4.
Skeletal Radiol ; 52(6): 1073-1088, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36350387

ABSTRACT

Weight bearing CT (WBCT) of the lower extremity is gaining momentum in evaluation of the foot/ankle and knee. A growing number of international studies use WBCT, which is promising for improving our understanding of anatomy and biomechanics during natural loading of the lower extremity. However, we believe there is risk of excessive enthusiasm for WBCT leading to premature application of the technique, before sufficiently robust protocols are in place e.g. standardised limb positioning and imaging planes, choice of anatomical landmarks and image slices used for individual measurements. Lack of standardisation could limit benefits from introducing WBCT in research and clinical practice because useful imaging information could become obscured. Measurements of bones and joints on WBCT are influenced by joint positioning and magnitude of loading, factors that need to be considered within a 3-D coordinate system. A proportion of WBCT studies examine inter- and intraobserver reproducibility for different radiological measurements in the knee or foot with reproducibility generally reported to be high. However, investigations of test-retest reproducibility are still lacking. Thus, the current ability to evaluate, e.g. the effects of surgery or structural disease progression, is questionable. This paper presents an overview of the relevant literature on WBCT in the lower extremity with an emphasis on factors that may affect measurement reproducibility in the foot/ankle and knee. We discuss the caveats of performing WBCT without consensus on imaging procedures and measurements.


Subject(s)
Cone-Beam Computed Tomography , Motivation , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Foot , Weight-Bearing
5.
J Foot Ankle Surg ; 59(1): 195-200, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31882140

ABSTRACT

Surgical repair of complete plantar fascia ruptures has not yet been reported in the literature. Operative technique and outcome are described in 2 gymnasts with heavy plyometric demands who received surgical repair compared with 3 athletes treated nonoperatively. Biomechanics and clinical implications are discussed. In the last 8 years, we have seen 5 high-demand athletes with total rupture of the plantar fascia. This is a retrospective clinical evaluation 1.5 to 8 years postinjury of all 5 patients using dynamic ultrasound, Foot Function Index, sports-specific questions, Foot Posture Index, and foot length. The operated gymnasts returned to the same level of performance within 12 months. None of the conservatively treated athletes returned to preinjury plyometric sports levels but reached a foot load capacity of distance running with the injured foot as limiting factor. Ultrasound with simultaneous dorsiflexion of the toes showed a normal fascia in the operated patients, but a slack fascia that tightened up only at terminal toe dorsiflexion in the conservatively treated group. According to the Foot Function Index, the operated patients reported no complaints, whereas the nonoperative group had clinical relevant impairments in activities of daily life. The Foot Posture Index in all nonoperated patients showed a relative shift toward pronation with increased foot length compared with the noninjured foot. The operated patients showed no difference in foot length but minimal shift into supination with a slightly altered arch contour. Surgical repair of plantar fascia ruptures is technically feasible to restore normal foot load capability with return to high-demand plyometric sports within 12 months.


Subject(s)
Athletic Injuries/surgery , Fascia/injuries , Foot Injuries/surgery , Foot/surgery , Forefoot, Human/injuries , Forefoot, Human/surgery , Adult , Female , Foot Injuries/etiology , Humans , Male , Rupture , Young Adult
6.
World J Orthop ; 9(4): 65-71, 2018 Apr 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29686971

ABSTRACT

AIM: To develop practical guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of the painful snapping elbow syndrome (SE). METHODS: Clinical studies were searched in the databases PubMed and Scopus for the phrases "SE", "snapping triceps", "snapping ulnar nerve" and "snapping annular ligament". A total of 36 relevant studies were identified. From these we extracted information about number of patients, diagnostic methods, patho-anatomical findings, treatments and outcomes. Practical guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of SE were developed based on analysis of the data. We present two illustrative patient cases-one with intra-articular pathology and one with extra-articular pathology. RESULTS: Snapping is audible, palpable and often visible. It has a lateral (intra-articular) or medial (extra-articular) pathology. Snapping over the medial humeral epicondyle is caused by dislocation of the ulnar nerve or a part of the triceps tendon, and is demonstrated by dynamic ultrasonography. Treatment is by open surgery. Lateral snapping over the radial head has an intra-articular pathology: A synovial plica, a torn annular ligament or a meniscus-like remnant from the foetal elbow. Pathology can be visualized by conventional arthrography, magnetic resonance (MR) arthrography, high resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and arthroscopy, while conventional MRI and radiographs often turn out normal. Treatment is by arthroscopic or eventual open resection. Early surgical intervention is recommended as the snapping can damage the ulnar nerve (medial) or the intra-articular cartilage (lateral). If medial snapping only occurs during repeated or loaded extension/flexion of the elbow (in sports or work) it may be treated by reduction of these activities. Differential diagnoses are loose bodies (which can be visualized by radiographs) and postero-lateral instability (demonstrates by clinical examination). An algorithm for diagnosis and treatment is suggested. CONCLUSION: The primary step is establishment of laterality. From this follows relevant diagnostic measures and treatment as defined in this guideline.

7.
Ugeskr Laeger ; 179(38)2017 Sep 18.
Article in Danish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28918785

ABSTRACT

Acute non-traumatic swelling of the knee is a common clinical challenge. The reason for the swelling has to be explored in order to give the correct treatment. This article gives an overview of possible diagnoses and suggests an algorithm for an approach to non-traumatic knee arthritis. Fundamental in the examination is a thorough patient anamnesis, which will help to differentiate between inflammatory and non-inflammatory arthritis. If there is not an obvious degenerative reason for the knee effusion, a joint aspiration followed by synovial fluid white cell count (WCC), microscopy and/or culture will add valuable information. Also, a normal C-reactive protein value together with synovial fluid WCC below 2,000 per cubic mm will make a septic arthritis diagnosis unlikely.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Arthritis/diagnosis , Edema/diagnosis , Knee Joint/pathology , Arthritis/pathology , Diagnosis, Differential , Edema/pathology , Humans , Medical History Taking
8.
Ugeskr Laeger ; 172(48): 3325-9, 2010 Nov 29.
Article in Danish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21118661

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: A descriptive study of patients referred to two rheumatology clinics. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Over a period of eight months, all patients with Achilles tendon pain (AT) were registered. All patients were clinically investigated and an ultrasound scan (US) was performed. RESULTS: A total of 113 patients were included (3.65% of all patients) with 132 AT. In all, 85 patients were sports active and the AT could be explained by overuse. A total of 28 patients had no relevant overuse and their ATs were considered to be degenerative. US changes were found in 112 tendons, but no pathologic changes were found in 20 symptomatic tendons. Conversely, we found US changes in 21 asymptomatic tendons. In our study, US helped to identify a misdiagnosed tendon rupture. In five patients, erosions were found, possibly as an initial sign of arthritis. US diagnosed 9% with bursitis, 35% with peritendinitis, 39% with neovascularisation within the tendon and 53% with increased thickness of the tendon. In most cases, the thickening was found 4-6 cm above the insertion, often in the vicinity of the soleus muscle-tendon junction. CONCLUSION: AT is a common complaint in rheumatology clinics. US alone cannot diagnose AT, but it serves as a supplement to clinical investigation. US can assist in achieving more precise diagnoses. Future studies must elucidate if the various diagnoses are associated with different prognoses and treatments.


Subject(s)
Achilles Tendon , Athletic Injuries/diagnosis , Pain/diagnosis , Tendinopathy/diagnosis , Achilles Tendon/diagnostic imaging , Achilles Tendon/injuries , Achilles Tendon/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neovascularization, Pathologic/diagnosis , Ultrasonography , Young Adult
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