Data Trace Publishing Company
Tracking Pixel
presents
Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics

Split posterior tibial-tendon transfers in children with cerebral spastic


paralysis and equinovarus deformity. Kling-TF Jr; Kaufer-H; Hensinger-RN J-Bone-Joint-Surg-Am. 1985 Feb; 67(2): 186-94 In the treatment of equinovarus deformity of the foot in children with cerebral spastic paralysis, to supplement heel-cord lengthening, we split the posterior tibial tendon and transferred its posterior half laterally into the peroneus brevis tendon. Thirty-seven operations were performed on thirty-one hemiplegic, quadriplegic, and diplegic children who were followed for a mean of eight years postoperatively (range, four to fourteen years), at which time twenty-six of the thirty-one children were skeletally mature. There were thirty excellent, four good, and three poor results. The results did not deteriorate with time. Thirty-two of thirty-four children with good or excellent results had functioning dorsiflexors of the foot and were brace-free postoperatively. The children who had a poor result had recurrent deformity, but none had development of a calcaneal or calcaneovalgus deformity.



Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.