SUMMARY
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Hallux Valgus, commonly referred to as a bunion, is a complex valgus deformity of the first ray that can cause medial big toe pain and difficulty with shoe wear.
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Diagnosis is made clinically with presence of a hallux that rests in a valgus and pronated position. Radiographs of the foot are obtained to identify the severity of the disease and for surgical planning.
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Treatment can be nonoperative with shoe modifications for mild and minimally symptomatic cases. Surgical management is indicated for progressive deformity and difficulty with shoe wear.
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EPIDEMIOLOGY
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Demographics
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more common in women
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Risk factors
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intrinsic
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genetic predisposition
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70% of pts with hallux valgus have family history
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increased distal metaphyseal articular angle (DMAA)
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ligamentous laxity (1st tarso-metatarsal joint instability)
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convex metatarsal head
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2nd toe deformity/amputation
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pes planus
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rheumatoid arthritis
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cerebral palsy
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extrinsic
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shoes with high heel and narrow toe box
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ETIOLOGY
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Two forms exist
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adult hallux valgus
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adolescent & juvenile hallux valgus
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Pathoanatamy
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valgus deviation of phalanx promotes varus position of metatarsal
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the metatarsal head displaces medially, leaving the sesamoid complex laterally translated relative to the metatarsal head
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sesamoids remain within the respective head of the flexor hallucis brevis tendon and are attached to the base of the proximal phalanx via the sesamoido-phalangeal ligament
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this lateral displacement can lead to transfer metatarsalgia due to shift in weight bearing
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medial MTP joint capsule becomes stretched and attenuated while the lateral capsule becomes contracted
- adductor tendon becomes deforming force
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inserts on fibular sesamoid and lateral aspect of proximal phalanx
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lateral deviation of EHL further contributes to deformity
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plantar and lateral migration of the abductor hallucis causes muscle to plantar flex and pronate phalanx
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windlass mechanism becomes less effective
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leads to transfer metatarsalgia
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Associated conditions
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hammer toe deformity
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callosities
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pes planus
- associated with deformity progression
- associated with deformity progression
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Juvenile and Adolescent Hallux valgus
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factors that differentiate juvenile / adolescent hallux valgus from adults
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often bilateral and familial
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pain usually not primary complaint
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varus of first MT with widened IMA usually present
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DMAA usually increased
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often associated with flexible flatfoot
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complications
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recurrence is most common complication (>50%), also overcorrection and hallux varus
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ANATOMY
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Pathoanatomy cascade
PRESENTATION
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Symptoms
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presents with difficulty with shoe wear due to medial eminence
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pain over prominence at MTP joint
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compression of digital nerve may cause symptoms
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Physical exam
- Hallux rests in valgus and pronated due to deforming forces illustrated above
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examine entire first ray for
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1st MTP ROM
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1st tarsometatarsal mobility
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callous formation
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sesamoid pain/arthritis
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evaluate associated deformities
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pes planus
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lesser toe deformities
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midfoot and hindfoot conditions
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- Hallux rests in valgus and pronated due to deforming forces illustrated above
IMAGING
Radiographs
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views
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standard series should include weight bearing AP, Lat, and oblique views
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sesamoid view can be useful
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findings
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lateral displacement of sesamoids
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joint congruency and degenerative changes can be evaluated
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radiographic parameters (see below) guide treatment
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TREATMENT - ADULT HALLUX VALGUS
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Nonoperative
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shoe modification/ pads/ spacers/orthoses
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indications
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first line treatment
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orthoses more helpful in patients with pes planus or metatarsalgia
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Operative
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surgical correction
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indications
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when symptoms present despite shoe modification
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do not perform for cosmetic reasons alone
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technique
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soft tissue procedure
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indicated in very mild disease in young female (almost never)
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distal osteotomy
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indicated in mild disease (IMA < 13)
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proximal or combined osteotomy
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indicated in more moderate disease (IMA > 13)
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1st TMT arthrodesis
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arthritis at TMT joint or instability
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fusion procedures
- indicated in severe deformity/spasticity/arthritis
- indicated in severe deformity/spasticity/arthritis
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MTP resection arthroplasty
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only indicated in elderly patients with low functional demands
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TREATMENT - JUVENILE AND ADOLESCENT HALLUX VALGUS
TECHNIQUES
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Soft Tissue Procedures
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modified McBride
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indications
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goal is to correct an incongruent MTP joint (phalanx not lined up with articular cartilage of MT head). Usually done in patients with
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a HVA less than 25 degrees
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IMA deformity less than 15 degrees
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usually in patient 30-50 years of age
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rarely appropriate in isolation
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usually performed in conjunction with
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medial eminence resection
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MT osteotomy
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1st TMT arthrodesis (Lapidus procedure)
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technique
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includes
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release of adductor from lateral sesamoid/proximal phalanx
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lateral capsulotomy
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medial capsular imbrication
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(original McBride included lateral sesamoidectomy)
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Metatarsal Osteotomies
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distal metatarsal osteotomy
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indications
- mild disease (HVA 15-25°, IMA < 13°)
- unable to correct pronation deformity
- mild disease (HVA 15-25°, IMA < 13°)
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distal metatarsal osteotomies include
- Chevron
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biplanar Chevron (corrects DMAA)
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Mitchell
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may be combined with proximal phalanx osteotomy (Akin-medial closing wedge osteotomy)
- Chevron
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- proximal metatarsal osteotomy
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indications
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moderate disease (HVA >40°, IMA >13°)
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proximal metatarsal osteotomies include
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crescentic osteotomy
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Broomstick osteotomy
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Ludloff
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Scarf
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double (proximal and distal) osteotomy
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indications
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severe disease (HVA 41-50°, IMA 16-20°)
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first cuneiform osteotomy
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indications
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severe deformity in young patient with open physis
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Proximal phalanx osteotomies
- Akin osteotomy
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indications
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hallux valgus interphalangeus
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congruent joint with DMAA <10°
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as a secondary procedure if a primary procedure (e.g., chevron or distal soft-tissue procedure) did not provide sufficient correction due to a large DMAA or HVI
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some authors perform Akin together with/at the time of proximal osteotomy+distal soft tissue correction because this results in progressive increase in HVI
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- Akin osteotomy
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Fusion procedures
- Lapidus procedure (1st metatarsocuneiform arthrodesis with modified McBride)
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indications
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severe deformity (very large IMA)
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arthritis at 1st TMT
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metatarsus primus varus
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hypermobile 1st TMT joint
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concomitant pes planus
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MTP Arthrodesis
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indications are hallux valgus in
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cerebral palsy
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Down's syndrome
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Rheumatoid arthritis
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Gout
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Severe DJD
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Ehler-Danlos
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- Lapidus procedure (1st metatarsocuneiform arthrodesis with modified McBride)
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Resection arthroplasty
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proximal phalanx (Keller) resection arthroplasty
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indications
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largely abandoned
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rarely indicated in some elderly patient with reduced function demands
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Surgical Indications for Specific Conditions
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Juvenile/Adolescent with open physis
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First cuneiform osteotomy
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Hypermobile 1st MT
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Lapidus procedure
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DJD
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MTP arthrodesis
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Skin breakdown
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Simple bunionectomy with medial eminence removal
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Gout
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MTP arthrodesis
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Recurrence with pain in 1st TMT joint
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Lapidus procedure
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Rheumatoid arthritis
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MTP arthrodesis
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Down's syndrome, CP, Ehler-Danlos
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MTP arthrodesis
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COMPLICATIONS
- Recurrence
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most common cause of failure is insufficient preoperative assessment and failure to follow indications
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e.g., failure to recognize DMAA > 10°
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inadequate correction of IMA
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e.g., failure to do adequate distal soft tissue realignment
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more common in juvenile/adolescent population
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noncompliant patient that bears weight
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rounded shape to the first metatarsal head
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residual tibial sesamoid lateral displacement
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increased preoperative IMA and HVA
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failure to perform a lateral release of the adductor hallucis tendon
- associated with incomplete reduction of the sesamoids
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- Avascular necrosis
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medial capsulotomy is primary insult to blood flow to metatarsal head
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distal metatarsal oseotomy and lateral soft tissue release inconjunction do not increase risk for AVN (Chevron plus lateral release thought to increase risk in the past)
- treat with MTP arthrodesis with or without structural graft
- treat with MTP arthrodesis with or without structural graft
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Dorsal malunion with transfer metatarsalgia
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due to overload of lesser metatarsal heads
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risk associated with shortening of hallux MT
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Lapidus
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proximal crescentric osteotomies
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- Hallux Varus
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overcorrection of 1st IMA
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excessive lateral capsular release with overtightening of medial capsule
- overresection of medial first metatarsal head
- lateral sesamoidectomy
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- caused by
- Cock up toe deformity
- due to injury of FHL
- most severe complication with Keller resection
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due to injury of FHL
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most severe complication with Keller resection
- 2nd MT transfer metatarsalgia
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often seen concomitant with hallux valgus
- can occur secondary to malpositioning of MTP fusion
- shortening metatarsal osteotomy (Weil) indicated with extensor tendon and capsular release
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- Neuropraxia
- Painful incisional neuromas after bunion surgery frequently involve the medial dorsal cutaneous nerve (a terminal branch of the superficial peroneal nerve).
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It is most commonly injured during the medial approach for capsular imbrication or metatarsal osteotomy.
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- Painful incisional neuromas after bunion surgery frequently involve the medial dorsal cutaneous nerve (a terminal branch of the superficial peroneal nerve).