Document Type
Article
Language
eng
Format of Original
10 p.
Publication Date
4-2014
Publisher
Springer
Source Publication
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
Source ISSN
0009-921X
Original Item ID
doi: 10.1007/s11999-013-3386-8
Abstract
Background
Clubfoot can be treated nonoperatively, most commonly using a Ponseti approach, or surgically, most often with a comprehensive clubfoot release. Little is known about how these approaches compare with one another at longer term, or how patients treated with these approaches differ in terms of foot function, foot biomechanics, or quality-of-life from individuals who did not have clubfoot as a child.
Questions/purposes
We compared (1) focused physical and radiographic examinations, (2) gait analysis, and (3) quality-of-life measures at long-term followup between groups of adult patients with clubfoot treated either with the Ponseti method of nonsurgical management or a comprehensive surgical release through a Cincinnati incision, and compared these two groups with a control group without clubfoot.
Methods
This was a case control study of individuals treated for clubfoot at two separate institutions with different methods of treatment between 1983 to 1987. One hospital used only the Ponseti method and the other mainly used a comprehensive clubfoot release. There were 42 adults (24 treated surgically, 18 treated with Ponseti method) with isolated clubfoot along with 48 healthy control subjects who agreed to participate in a detailed analysis of physical function, foot biomechanics, and quality-of-life metrics.
Results
Both treatment groups had diminished strength and motion compared with the control subjects on physical examination measures; however, the Ponseti group had significantly greater ankle plantar flexion ROM (p < 0.001), greater ankle plantar flexor (p = 0.031) and evertor (p = 0.012) strength, and a decreased incidence of osteoarthritis in the ankle and foot compared with the surgical group. During gait the surgical group had reduced peak ankle plantar flexion (p = 0.002), and reduced sagittal plane hindfoot (p = 0.009) and forefoot (p = 0.008) ROM during the preswing phase compared with the Ponseti group. The surgical group had the lowest overall ankle power generation during push off compared with the control subjects (p = 0.002). Outcome tools revealed elevated pain levels in the surgical group compared with the Ponseti group (p = 0.008) and lower scores for physical function and quality-of-life for both clubfoot groups compared with age-range matched control subjects (p = 0.01).
Conclusions
Although individuals in each treatment group experienced pain, weakness, and reduced ROM, they were highly functional into early adulthood. As adults the Ponseti group fared better than the surgically treated group because of advantages including increased ROM observed at the physical examination and during gait, greater strength, and less arthritis. This study supports efforts to correct clubfoot with Ponseti casting and minimizing surgery to the joints, and highlights the need to improve methods that promote ROM and strength which are important for adult function.
Level of Evidence
Level III, prognostic study.
Recommended Citation
Smith, Peter A.; Kuo, Ken N.; Graf, Adam; Krzak, Joseph; Flanagan, Ann; Hassani, Sahar; Caudill, Angela; Dietz, Frederick; Morcuende, Jose; and Harris, Gerald F., "Long-term Results of Comprehensive Clubfoot Release Versus the Ponseti Method: Which Is Better?" (2014). Biomedical Engineering Faculty Research and Publications. 97.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/bioengin_fac/97
ADA Accessible Version
Comments
Accepted version. Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, Vol. 472, No. 4 (April 2014): 1281-1290. DOI. © 2014 Springer. Used with permission.
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