Hallux Varus (Surgery) Flashcards
Hallux varus
Congenital
Acquired
1?
2?
3?
4?
- Traumatic
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Idiopathic
- Iatrogenic
What are some of the etiologies for hallux varus?
1?
2?
3?
4?
- Overaggressive Medial Capsulorrhaphy
- Overaggressive Plantar-lateral Release
- Excessive Medial Exostectomy/”Staking”
- Osseous Overcorrection
What does it mean by overaggressive plantar-lateral release?
1?
2?
3?
4?
- Lateral Capsule (42.2%)
- Adductor Hallucis (+25.2%)
- FHB – Lateral Slip (+14.2%)
- Fibular Sesamoidectomy
What are the options of complete soft tissue release for hallux varus?
1. Joint Evaluation / Arthrolysis
- Capsule Tendon Rebalancing
- Tendon Transfers
4. Osseous Correction (When Indicated and At Level of Deformity)
5. Joint Destructive / Salvage Procedures
- What does the soft tissue procedure for hallux varus?
- what condition?
- Flexible, Non-arthritic, Hallux Varus
What are the surgical options for structural correction of hallux varus?
1?
2?
3?
4?
1. Reverse Austin
2. Opening Wedge Osteotomy
- Reverse Reverdin
- Reverse Akin
What surgical option would you use for this x-ray?
Arthrex Mini thightrope
Surgical repair/ Joint destructive
Unstable
Stable
1. Resection Arthroplasty
2. Resection Arthroplasty with Implant
3. Arthrodesis
Step 1 of extensor hallucis brevis transfer:
Harvesting of the extensor hallucis brevis
Step 2 of extensor hallucis brevis transfer:
Rerouting the tendon under the intermetatarsal ligament
Step 3 of extensor hallucis brevis transfer?
Passing the tendon through a bone tunnel and securing the tendon to the medial aspect of the first metatarsal