Foot and ankle Flashcards

1
Q

How many bones are there in the foot?

A

26 bones and 2 sesamoid bones

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2
Q

Functional requirements of the foot (4)

A

Withstand high load (body weight)
Adapt to terrain
Be durable
Transfer loads from lower extremity

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3
Q

What are the 4 joints in the foot

A

Subtalar
Midtarsal
Ankle
Metatarsal break

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4
Q

What are the articulating bones in the subtalar joints

A

Calcaneus and Talus

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5
Q

What are the articulating bones in the midtarsal joints

A

Cuboid/Navicular and Calcaneus/talus

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6
Q

What are the articulating bones in the ankle joint

A

Tibia and talus (atypical hinge joint)

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7
Q

What foot movement is TIBIAL INTERNAL ROTATION coupled to

A

Foot eversion

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8
Q

What foot movement is TIBIAL EXTERNAL ROTATION coupled to

A

Foot inversion

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9
Q

Factors affecting coupled kinematics in foot

A

Shape of foot
Magnitude of load (high loads –> less coupling)
Bone loaded (loading the foot vs tibia –> more coupling)

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10
Q

What is the consequence of congenital fusion of subtalar joint?

A

Leads to ball-and socket ankle joint

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11
Q

What structural characteristic of the foot allows it to adapt to different terrains (3)

A

Medial & lateral longitudinal arches
Transverse arches
Plantar fascia

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12
Q

What 2 parts of the foot bear the most weight and what proportions

A

Talus/Calcaneus - 60%

Metatarsals - 30%

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13
Q

What 2 movements of the MTP joint characterise Hallux Valgus

A

Medial of 1st MTP head

Lateral deviation if 1st toe

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14
Q

What is the angle above which the toe is classificed as valgus

A

Greater than 15 degrees

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15
Q

Risk factors for Hallux valgus (4)

A

Female sex
Older age
ligament laxity
Footwear

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16
Q

What muscles and ligaments control ab/adduction of the hallux

A

Adductor hallucis via the lateral collateral ligament

Abductor hallucis via the medial collateral ligament

17
Q

What is the effect on gait (3)

A

More pressure on hallux
Weight distribution centred more medially - changes moment arm of foot muscles
Eversion of foot

18
Q

Treatment of hallux valgus

A
Bunionectomy/Exosectomy
Osteotomy
MTP Arthrodesis (fusion)
19
Q

What bone changes are seen in Gout

A

Osteophytes
Osteolysis
Cartilage damage

20
Q

How does gait change in Gout (2)

A

Slower walking

Load bearing is more evenly distributed (as opposed to being bore by calcaneus)

21
Q

3 methods of MTP fusion

A

K wires
Wires
Dorsal locking plates

22
Q

Effects of MTP fusion (3)

A

Shorter stride length
Reduced plantarflexion
Increased load on other 4 toes

23
Q

Explain the Windlass mechanism

A

When hallux is dorsiflexed to prepare for toe-off/propulsion the plantar fascia is stretches
Plantar fascia moves proximally
Reduces distance between calcaneus and metatarsals which raises medial longitudinal arch
Allows foot to act as a rigid lever