scholarly journals Surgical treatment of tarsal coalitions in children and adolescents

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 80-89
Author(s):  
Alpesh Kothari ◽  
Javier Masquijo

A tarsal coalition is an abnormal connection between two or more tarsal bones caused by failure of mesenchymal segmentation. The two most common tarsal coalitions are calcaneonavicular coalition (CNC) and talocalcaneal coalition (TCC). Both CNC and TCC can be associated with significant foot and ankle pain and impaired quality of life; there may also be concomitant foot and ankle deformity. Initial, non-operative management for symptomatic tarsal coalition commonly fails, leaving surgical intervention as the only recourse. The focus of this article is to critically describe the variety of methods used to surgically manage CNC and TCC. In review of the pertinent literature we highlight the ongoing treatment controversies in this field and discuss new innovations. The evidence-based algorithmic approach used by the authors in the management of tarsal coalitions is illustrated alongside some clinical pearls that should help surgeons treating this common, and at times complex, condition. Cite this article: EFORT Open Rev 2020;5:80-89. DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.5.180106

The Surgeon ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
James M. Halle-Smith ◽  
James Hodson ◽  
Lewis Stevens ◽  
Darius F. Mirza ◽  
Keith J. Roberts

Medicinus ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 199
Author(s):  
Andry Irawan ◽  
Clinton Clinton ◽  
Sutanto D ◽  
Agustina F

<p><strong>Introduction</strong><strong>:</strong> Pancreatic injury is a rare case, caused by blunt or sharp trauma. Difficulty in making diagnose on pancreatic trauma cases are associated with high mortality, and the treatment can be either operative or conservatively. However, It is still unclear which treatment is more favorable.</p><p><strong>Case:</strong> We present 2 cases of Grade III pancreatic injury with stable hemodynamic who suffered bicycle accident. First case, 12-year-old boy complaining severe pain on the upper left abdomen (VAS 9-10) and get worsening by time, with vomiting. The patient underwent distal Pancreatectomy-Splenectomy. Second case, 8-year-old boy complaining of pain on the upper left abdomen (VAS 6-7) without extension on whole abdominal region with vomiting and fever. The patient was treated conservatively. In both cases, patient was discharged with improvement. However, about 3 months later patients who were treated conservatively developed into a pseudocyst.</p><p><strong>Conclusion:</strong> The selection of management in grade III pancreatic injury can be operative or conservative depending on clinical findings such as hemodynamic condition and the quality of abdominal pain. But the occurrence of pseudocysts pancreas is another surgical challenge.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10_suppl5) ◽  
pp. 2325967121S0032
Author(s):  
Elyse Berlinberg ◽  
Matthew Kingery ◽  
Amit Manjunath ◽  
Danielle Markus ◽  
Eric Strauss

Objectives: Patients with a superior labral anterior to posterior (SLAP) tear of the shoulder are often initially treated non-operatively, but many do not respond and require surgery. Identifying patients who are likely to fail non-operative management and would benefit from early surgical intervention can shorten time of disability and limit resources utilized on unsuccessful treatments. The purpose of this study is to create a clinical prediction model to determine which patients are likely to fail non-operative treatment of SLAP tears and require surgical intervention. Methods: This was a case-control study consisting of patients treated at a single institution for isolated, non-degenerative SLAP tears. Patients with concomitant rotator cuff tears were excluded from this analysis. Patients were retrospectively surveyed using the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) system regarding clinical features of their shoulder injury, non-operative treatments that they received, and key functional outcomes during their post-injury period. Responders underwent additional medical record review to identify other variables related to the clinical presentation and treatment of their shoulder injury. In order to simplify the predictive model and optimize its interpretability, the lasso (least absolute shrinkage and selection operator) method of penalized logistic regression analysis was used to identify the characteristics that were most closely associated with failure of nonoperative treatment. The data was randomly split into a training set and test set. Using the training set, the value of lambda which minimized cross-validation prediction error rate was determined (Figure 1). The final lasso model was then computed. The predictive accuracy of the final model was assessed using the test data set. Results: Overall, 189 patients were contacted and included in the analysis. The mean age of included patients was 29.9 +/- 6.7 years. Thirty-eight patients (20.1%) were female. One hundred and six patients (56.1%) failed non-operative management and required surgical intervention. The final lasso model identified a total of 9 variables that were significantly associated with failure of non-operative management of SLAP tears (Table 1). These predictors included pre-injury overhead sports participation, presence of specific symptoms, severity of pain, and the type of non-operative treatment modalities used. Injury to the dominant extremity, history of prior shoulder injury, patient age, use of NSAIDs, and occupation involving manual labor or overhead work were not associated with failure of nonoperative treatment. The predictive accuracy of the model was 70.3% (95% CI 53.0%, 84.1%). Sensitivity of the model was 81.0% and specificity was 56.3%. Conclusions: A clinical prediction model consisting of variables describing patient characteristics, specific symptoms, and the type of non-operative treatment modalities utilized was found to predict failure of non-operative management of SLAP tears with moderate accuracy. Further refinements of this prediction model, including the inclusion of additional physical examination and imaging variables, will be required before future iterations are tested in clinical practice.


2007 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Kobayashi ◽  
M Sakurai ◽  
T Kobayashi

Stenosing tenosynovitis of the extensor digitorum longus tendon is an injury related to ultramarathon running. A 32-year-old male ultramarathon runner developed chronic tenosynovitis of the ankle dorsiflexors. He was diagnosed with extensor digitorum longus tenosynovitis caused by talar head impingement associated with exostosis. He failed to respond to non-operative management and decided to undergo tenosynovectomy of the extensor digitorum longus tendon. The pain was relieved without functional disturbance of the foot and ankle, and the patient returned to running 3 weeks postoperatively. At the 2-year follow-up, he was participating fully in ultramarathons.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (04) ◽  
pp. 251-257
Author(s):  
Mayin Lin ◽  
Shankar Raman

AbstractThe prevalence of diverticular disease in the Western and industrialized nations has increased over the last century, and our understanding of this disease and its management continues to evolve. In this article, we review the literature regarding the postoperative quality of life (QOL) and functional outcomes following surgical management of diverticulitis, including information regarding bowel function, recurrence of symptoms, and other postoperative sequelae. While objective parameters, such as attacks of diverticulitis, complications, and clinical episodes have been studied, there is a paucity of data on less objective factors, such as overall patient satisfaction after operative management of diverticular disease. The literature shows improvement in QOL following surgical intervention for diverticulitis if preoperative QOL was significantly low, secondary to severe/complicated diverticulitis. However, a subset of patients does continue to have symptoms following surgical intervention for diverticulitis. Often neglected in the literature, there remains a need for prospective data evaluating preoperative function to ascertain the impact of surgery on patients' QOL and postoperative function.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 2473011420S0005
Author(s):  
Benjamin B. Lindsey ◽  
Neil K. Bakshi ◽  
David M. Walton ◽  
James R. Holmes ◽  
Paul G. Talusan

Category: Sports; Midfoot/Forefoot; Trauma Introduction/Purpose: Return-to-play (RTP) rates of National Football League (NFL) athletes following surgical intervention for numerous foot and ankle injuries has been reported. To our knowledge, no studies have reported on RTP rates of NFL athletes after non-operative and operative treatment of high-grade turf toe injuries. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the RTP rates in NFL athletes who sustained high-grade turf to injuries. We hypothesized that NFL athletes requiring operative intervention for high-grade turf toe injuries would have lower RTP rates and longer recoveries than athletes treated non- operatively. Additionally, we hypothesized that regardless of treatment, NFL athletes would demonstrate equal productivity following RTP. Methods: Publicly available NFL injury data was reviewed to identify athletes who sustained high-grade turf toe injuries, as indicated by surgical intervention or missed playing time of 2 weeks or more. Athletes were excluded if RTP was prevented for reasons unrelated to the injury. Demographic and performance data was obtained including a player’s injury, date of injury, date of surgery, RTP, time to RTP, number and percentage of games played, and performance. Results: 53 NFL athletes were identified with high-grade turf toe injuries that met inclusion criteria. 28 of these athletes were treated non-operatively and 25 were treated with surgery. The overall RTP rate was 91%. Athletes who were treated non- operatively had a RTP rate of 100% while athletes who underwent surgery had a RTP rate of 80% (P = 0.011). The mean time to RTP for all athletes was 140.9+-111.9 days. The mean time to RTP for non-operatively treated patients was 75.8+-99.0 days, compared with 221.4+-81.6 days for operatively treated athletes (P = 0.002). In skill position athletes who achieved RTP, 78% treated non-operatively were able to return to their prior level of performance compared to only 27% for athletes treated surgically (P = 0.032). Conclusion: There is a significant difference in return to play following surgical versus non-operative management of high-grade turf toe injuries, with only 80% of athletes achieving return to play after surgery. No athletes were able to return the same season as surgery and the mean time to RTP following initiation of treatment was significantly shorter for players who underwent non- operative management. Postoperative performance was also significantly worse in players who underwent surgical intervention compared to non-operative management. This study provides important prognostic information to high level athletes in regards to recovery following high-grade turf toe injuries


Author(s):  
Wassem Ameer Shater, Mohammad Ali Nasser, Ali Mohammad Allou Wassem Ameer Shater, Mohammad Ali Nasser, Ali Mohammad Allou

Aim of study: Evaluating a non- operative treatment of pediatric blunt abdominal trauma and avoiding unnecessary surgical intervention in Tishreen University Hospital. Methods: During years (2016- 2020) a retroprospective study was conducted on 62 children who had isolated blunt abdominal trauma or associated with other injuries, most of them were managed by non- operative treatment but some required surgical management. Results: Non- operative management of pediatric blunt abdominal injuries was applied for 59 patients, three patients required a surgical procedure, the spleen was the most organ exposed to injury (40) child, followed by liver (26) child, kidney (4) and (1) pancreatic injury. Non- operative management was successful in most solid organs injuries with grades 1, 2 and 3, but it failed in 5 grade splenic injury. one out of two hollow viscus injuries required surgical intervention. There were no statistical differences between the study groups in age, gender and injury mechanism. Hospital length of stay was significantly longer in patients who underwent a laparotomy (6) days compared to other non- operative patients (3) days, one complication occurred during non- operative management as pseudocyst after pancreatic injury, (4) patient died in the non- operative group due to hemodynamic instability and associated severe cerebral injuries. Conclusion: It is safe to treat most children with blunt abdominal injuries non- operatively if monitoring is adequate with hemodynamic stability.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Afuwape OO ◽  
Ulasi IB ◽  
Ajagbe OA ◽  
Soneye OY ◽  
Ekhaiyeme PA ◽  
...  

Background: Adhesive Bowel Obstruction (ABO) is a major cause of intestinal obstruction globally and in the developing world. Although guidelines for its management lean towards initial non-operative management, it is important to identify factors that may predict the need for an operative intervention in the early phase of presentation.


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