club foot
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frédérique MARTY

Through two works taken from Balzac's Comédie humaine (César Birotteau and Modeste Mignon) our study seeks to demonstrate the power of ostracization of social representations against deviant bodies in the 19th century in Western societies. We question the tolerance scale for mild disability, the club-foot, in two parts, and then in the face of a deformity considered to be monstrous, that of a hunchbacked dwarf. If the first person with a disability manages to marry his sweetheart, he owes it to its intact validity, to a share of luck afforded by the novelist, but above all to the force of money! We will find this character in the Human comedy. The second only exists for the duration of the novel. Faced with the one he loves and the reader, he shines with the intelligence and sensitivity bestowed by the narrator. For happiness, he will have to be content to be the true craftsman of the one whom the one he loves aims for, without sharing it, because a monster, even bright and full of humor, remains a monster.


2021 ◽  
Vol 58 (S1) ◽  
pp. 163-163
Author(s):  
M. Dap ◽  
H. Harter ◽  
L. Lambert ◽  
C. Bonnet ◽  
E. Perdriolle‐Galet ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Hu ◽  
Baoyi Ke ◽  
Niansu Xiao ◽  
Sen Li ◽  
Cheng Li ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives. We retrospectively investigated the clinical materials to seek the factors that lead to relapse after using the Ponseti method.Methods. We retrospectively reviewed all children with congenital club foot treated with the Ponseti method in our hospital from June 2008 to June 2013. The data included the following factors: age, gender, initial Pinari score, number of casts, number of feet (unilateral or bilateral), age at the first casting, age of mother, tenotomy, walking age, and compliance with using bracing. All investigations were conducted in conformity with ethical standards. This study was approved by Guilin Peoples’ Hospital Ethics Committee.Results. In this study, there were 148 cases with 164 feet in total that underwent the Ponseti method. Of them, 64 children presented with left side, 58 with right side, and 26 with bilateral cases. This study included 75 males and 73 females; sex did not affect the outcomes. The mean age of the first casting was 2.50±2.15 months. The average initial Pirani score was 4.98±1.33, 2 and the average number of casts was 5.71±2.28 times. The mean age of mothers at birth was 25.81±2.38 years old. The walking age of children was at a mean of 14.83±1.18 months. Forty-nine cases could not tolerate using braces, namely the rate of noncompliance in this study was 33.1%. Tenotomy was performed on 113 feet (76.4%). The average follow–up period was 7.27±1.29 years (from 5 to 10 years). The rate of relapse was 21.6% (32 cases) at the end of the follow-up. The rate of relapse in the noncompliance with using bracing group was significantly higher compared to the compliance group.Conclusion. The initial Pirani score, compliance with the foot abduction brace and the age at the first casting are three independent factors for relapse in clubfoot.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-49
Author(s):  
Ranjeet Choudhary ◽  
Alok Chandra Agrawal ◽  
Anupam Pradip Inamdar ◽  
Pandya Raj ◽  
Shilp Verma

Congenital clubfoot has a multifaceted etiology, with several hypotheses offered in its etiopathogenesis. The clubfoot has rarely been reported in babies born to women who have rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We present a rare case of a 31-year-old lady with RA on disease-modifying anti-rheumatoid drugs who delivered a child with bilateral congenital clubfoot. She had previously been using Methotrexate, Hydroxychloroquine, and Sulfasalazine regularly, but Methotrexate was stopped seven months before pregnancy. A full-term female baby was born through the cesarean section with bilateral clubfoot deformity and a modified Pirani score of eight out of 10. The deformity correction was done with the Ponseti serial casting method. The final modified Pirani score was two out of ten. In newborns born to rheumatoid arthritis mothers, the club foot deformity was effectively treated with serial Ponseti corrective casts, as was idiopathic clubfoot in babies born to non-rheumatoid mothers. Our findings validate the Ponseti serial casting method for these kinds of patients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (29) ◽  
pp. 2633-2638
Author(s):  
Venkat R ◽  
Suguru Rav Kumar ◽  
Penugonda Ravi Shankar ◽  
Deety Lakshmi Venkatesh

BACKGROUND Pirani scoring system is one of the classification systems in management of club foot which is simple and easy to use. However, there is paucity of studies using Pirani system to determine the severity and monitor progress in the treatment of club foot. We therefore set out with the aim of assessing severity and monitoring the progress of treatment using the Pirani scoring system. The Pirani scoring system, together with the Ponseti method of club foot management, was assessed for its predictive value. METHODS It was a hospital-based prospective study of 57 club foot in 41 patients designed to evaluate the role of Pirani score in deformity assessment and management of club foot by Ponseti method. Consecutive patients presenting at the outpatient department at SVRRGGH, Tirupati with idiopathic club foot, and in-patients department with idiopathic club foot were recruited into the study. Informed consent was obtained from parents/guardians of the patients that were recruited in the study. This was a prerequisite for obtaining the ethical approval. Data collected from the study groups was entered into a worksheet, and analysis was performed using the statistical package for social sciences (SPSS) software for windows version 21. Significant statistical inferences were drawn at p & lt ; 0.05. RESULTS The correlation between the midfoot score, hindfoot score, Pirani score and the number of casts to achieve correction was significant (P = 0.001). Also, there was correlation between the Pirani score and the need for tenotomy (P = 0.001); between the number of casts to achieve correction and the need for tenotomy (P = 0.001). Moreover, the progress of treatment can be monitored with the Pirani score (P = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Pirani scoring system is a simple, easy, quick and reliable system to determine severity and monitor progress in the treatment of club foot with excellent interobserver variability. KEYWORDS Pirani Score, Club Foot, Ponseti Method


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1871-1873
Author(s):  
Shabana Sharif ◽  
Rehan Ramzan Khan ◽  
Saima Riaz ◽  
Sajid Rashid ◽  
Zaigham Rasool Athar ◽  
...  

Objective: To determine the effectiveness of ponseti versus kite method for the management of club foot among children. Methods: A quasi experimental trial was conducted to determine the most effective conservative method for managing idiopathic club foot. This study was carried out in District Head Quarter Hospital, Layyah. A total of 46 children (60 Feet) aged less than six months of both genders were included in this study using convenience sampling technique. The study sample was divided into Group A (Ponseti) and Group B (Kite). Each treatment group comprises of 30 feet. Patients were called for weekly follow up till ten weeks consecutively. At every follow-up visit, patients were assessed to check the improvement of deformity with the help of the Pirani scoring system for the foot. Pirani score difference was measured in both treatment groups from the baseline until the last follow-up interval until the 10th Week. Pirani score difference was measured in both treatment groups from the baseline until the last follow-up interval until the 10th Week. A greater negative value signified better correction. SPSS 23 was used for data entry and analysis. Results: Children's mean age in both treatment groups (A and B) was 10.83±4.59 and 10.20±4.75 weeks. At presentation mean Pirani score in both treatment groups (A and B) was 5.85±0.67 and 5.86±0.45, respectively, while at 10th follow up it was 1.42±0.39 and 2.35±0.54 for group A and group B, respectively. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that the Ponseti technique significantly improved the management of club foot as that of the Kites method. Ponseti's method is more effective in terms of rapid improvement in the involved group. Key words: Non operative Management, Idiopathic Club foot, Kites method, Ponseti method.


Author(s):  
Alaaeldin Azmi Ahmad ◽  
Ahmed F. Ghanem ◽  
Jihad M. Hamaida ◽  
Mosab S. Maree ◽  
Loai J. Aker ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (16) ◽  
pp. 1068-1073
Author(s):  
Vishnu M ◽  
Jacob Mathew ◽  
Raju Karuppal ◽  
Amarnath Prasad

BACKGROUND Though the Ponseti method has become the popular and standard of care for clubfoot correction, relapse of clubfoot deformity following correction is not uncommon. The relapsed feet can progress from flexible to rigid if left untreated and can become as severe as the initial deformity. The purpose of this study was to analyse the relapse pattern in clubfeet that have undergone treatment with the Ponseti method. METHODS Between 2015 and 2017, 78 children (134 feet), 58 boys and 20 girls were included in this study. It was a prospective observational study of relapse patterns in idiopathic clubfoot after one year of completion of the Ponseti method of treatment. Pirani scoring system was used to identify the relapse. RESULTS Dynamic, fixed, and complete relapse patterns were observed in this study. Patients were categorised into two groups - bilateral and unilateral. In the bilateral group, 18 children (36 feet i.e. 23 %) had decreased ankle dorsiflexion, 5 had (10 feet i.e. 6 %) rigid equinus, 22 had (44 feet i.e., 29 %) dynamic forefoot adduction or supination and 5 had (10 feet i.e. 6 %) fixed adduction in forefoot and midfoot. Six children from the bilateral group showed complete relapse. Among the unilateral group, 8 children (8 feet i.e. 36 %) presented with decreased ankle dorsiflexion, 4 had (4 feet i.e. 18 %) rigid equinus relapse, 6 had (6 feet i.e. 27 %) dynamic forefoot adduction or supination and 4 had (4 feet i.e. 18 %) showed fixed forefoot adduction. CONCLUSIONS Dynamic forefoot adduction or supination pattern is common to relapse pattern in the bilateral group and dynamic hind-foot relapse was common in the unilateral group. Age at initial presentation, initial Pirani score, and the number of casts required were not significantly related to the incidence of relapse. KEYWORDS Club Foot, CTEV, Ponseti Method, Relapse Pattern


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