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. 2018 Mar:34:83-89.
doi: 10.1016/j.foot.2017.11.008. Epub 2017 Nov 22.

Long-term follow-up of patients undergoing tibialis posterior transfer: Is acquired pes planus a complication?

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Long-term follow-up of patients undergoing tibialis posterior transfer: Is acquired pes planus a complication?

Mira Pecheva et al. Foot (Edinb). 2018 Mar.

Abstract

In this retrospective study, a series of 10 elective patients treated with transfer of the tibialis posterior (TP) tendon for pes cavus and drop foot are described. Since TP transfer completely subtracts the role of this tendon, this cohort of patients provides an opportunity to examine the consequences of tibialis posterior (TP) deficiency. After a mean follow up period of 44.7 months, only one patient showed evidence of strain in the spring ligament but none of the patients in this series developed clinical or radiological evidence of planovalgus deformity. The authors conclude that planovalgus deformity is not an inevitable sequelae of TP Tendon transfer and that established theory underestimates the role of static soft tissue restraints such as spring ligament in hindfoot stability.

Keywords: Adult acquired flatfoot deformity; Spring ligament; Tibialis posterior insufficiency.

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