Alteration in hypoplasia of the hindfoot structures during early growth in clubfeet treated using the Ponseti method

Author:

Beck J. J.1,Sangiorgio S. N.1,Jew M. H.1,Marcum T.1,Cooper S. D.1,Ebramzadeh E.1,Zionts L. E.1

Affiliation:

1. Orthopedic Institute for Children and the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Abstract

Purpose Previous reports have demonstrated diminished size of the hindfoot bones in patients with idiopathic clubfoot deformity. However, no study has quantified the percentage of hypoplasia as a function of early growth, during the brace phase of Ponseti treatment. Methods We measured the dimensions of ossified structures on radiographs in patients with unilateral Ponseti-treated clubfeet to determine changes in the percentage of hypoplasia between two and four years of age. Results The degree of hypoplasia varied among the osseous structures in Ponseti-treated clubfeet at age two years, with greater hypoplasia being observed in the talus (7.3%), followed by calcaneus (4.9%) and the cuboid (4.8%). Overall, the degree of hypoplasia diminished by four years, such that the degree of hypoplasia was greatest in the talus (4.2%) and the calcaneus (4.2%) followed by the cuboid (0.6%). At four years of age, the greatest degree of hypoplasia persisted in the talus and calcaneus. Conclusions Changes occurred in the size of the ossification of hindfoot bones between two and four years of age, and the observed changes in the percentage of hypoplasia varied among the different structures. At four years of age, the greatest percentage of hypoplasia was observed in the talus and calcaneus at values similar to those previously reported in skeletally mature patients. The results suggested that the relative difference in size of the feet may be expected to remain constant in a child with a unilateral clubfoot after this age.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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