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Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment of idiopathic clubfoot. A thirty-year follow-up note.

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TLDR
The data suggest that a sedentary occupation and avoidance of excessive weight gain may improve the over-all long-term result and excessive weakening of the triceps surae may predispose patients to a poor result.
Abstract
We evaluated forty-five patients who had seventy-one congenital clubfeet. The average age was thirty-four years (range, twenty-five to forty-two years). Twenty-nine of these patients had been evaluated and reported on in 1980. We performed pedobarographic and electrogoniometric analyses in addition to the clinical and radiographic studies performed previously. With the use of pain and functional limitation as the outcome criteria, thirty-five (78 per cent) of the forty-five patients had an excellent or good outcome compared with eighty-two (85 per cent) of ninety-seven individuals who did not have congenital deformity of the foot. The patient's occupation, passive dorsiflexion as measured with a hand-held goniometer, the antero-posterior calcaneus-fifth metatarsal angle, the total foot pressure time integral, and the number of rapid single-limb toe-ups that could be performed were the only variables that differed significantly between the feet that had an excellent or good result and those that had a poor result (p < 0.05). A comparison of the feet that had an excellent or good outcome with those that had a poor outcome with regard to body-mass index, peak pressure under the heel, and force time integral under the metatarsal heads revealed a p value that was between 0.05 and 0.08 for each variable. The technique of treatment led to good long-term results in our patients who had clubfoot. The data suggest that a sedentary occupation and avoidance of excessive weight gain may improve the over-all long-term result. Excessive weakening of the triceps surae may predispose patients to a poor result; therefore, it is prudent to avoid overlengthening of this muscle. The outcome could not be predicted from the radiographic result.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Radical reduction in the rate of extensive corrective surgery for clubfoot using the Ponseti method.

TL;DR: The Ponseti method is a safe and effective treatment for congenital idiopathic clubfoot and radically decreases the need for extensive corrective surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors Predictive of Outcome After Use of the Ponseti Method for the Treatment of Idiopathic Clubfeet

TL;DR: Noncompliance and the educational level of the parents (high-school education or less) are significant risk factors for the recurrence of clubfoot deformity after correction with the Ponseti method.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ponseti versus traditional methods of casting for idiopathic clubfoot.

TL;DR: Serial casting is successful in avoiding extensive posteromedial release (PMR) in only 11% to 58% of patients with idiopathic congenital clubfoot, and based on the authors' initial success with the Ponseti method, they no longer believe that PMR is required for most cases of idiopathy clubfoot.
Journal ArticleDOI

Update on clubfoot: etiology and treatment.

TL;DR: An update on the etiology of clubfoot as well as current treatment strategies are provided and a combination of approaches that applies the strengths of several methods (Ponseti method and French method) may be needed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term follow-up of patients with clubfeet treated with extensive soft-tissue release.

TL;DR: There is a correlation between the extent of the soft-tissue release and the degree of functional impairment, which can result in a stiff, painful, and arthritic foot and significantly impaired quality of life.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Aspects of the Analysis of Data From Retrospective Studies of Disease

TL;DR: In this paper, the role and limitations of retrospective investigations of factors possibly associated with the occurrence of a disease are discussed and their relationship to forward-type studies emphasized, and examples of situations in which misleading associations could arise through the use of inappropriate control groups are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term results of treatment of congenital club foot.

TL;DR: In the majority of patients, foot and ankle motion was limited and the talocalcaneal angles as seen on the anteroposterior and lateral roentgenograms were not fully corrected, but transfer of the anterior tibial tendon to the third cuneiform appeared to prevent relapse.
Journal ArticleDOI

Average Partial Association in Three-way Contingency Tables: a Review and Discussion of Alternative Tests

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a class of multivariate extensions of the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test to sets of (s x r) tables, which are based on expected values and covariances from the multiple hypergeometric distribution for each table.
Journal ArticleDOI

Congenital Club Foot: The Results of Treatment

TL;DR: In this article, the results of treatment in sixty-seven patients with a total of ninety-four severe congenital club feet were evaluated five to thirteen years after the initial treatment, and the results in 71 per cent of the feet were good; in 28 per cent a slight residual deformity persisted; and in one foot a poor result was obtained.
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