Posterior Tibial Tendon Insufficiency: Which Ligaments are Involved?
- 1 June 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Foot & Ankle International
- Vol. 26 (6) , 427-435
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107110070502600601
Abstract
Background: The pathology manifested in posterior tibial tendon insufficiency (PTTI) is not limited to the posterior tibial tendon. The association of ligament failure with deformity has been discussed in numerous publications, but extensive documentation of the structures involved has not been performed. The purpose of this observational study was to identify the pattern of ligament involvement using standarized, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a series of 31 consecutive patients diagnosed with PTTI compared to an age matched control group without PTTI. Method: The structures evaluated by MRI were the posterior tibial tendon, superomedial and inferomedial components of the spring ligament complex, talocalcaneal interosseous ligament, long and short plantar ligaments, plantar fascia, deltoid ligament, plantar naviculocuneiform ligament, and tarsometatarsal ligaments. Structural derangement was graded on a five-part scale (0 to IV) with level 0 being normal and level IV indicating a tear of more than 50% of the cross-sectional area of the ligament. Standard flatfoot measurements taken from preoperative plain standing radiographs were correlated with the MRI grading system. Results: Statistically significant differences in frequency of pathology in the PTTI group and controls were found for the superomedial calcaneonavicular ligament (p < 0.0001), inferomedial calcaneonavicular ligament (p < 0.0001), interosseous ligament (p = 0.0009), anterior component of the superficial deltoid (p < 0.0001), plantar metatarsal ligaments (p = 0.0002) and plantar naviculocuneiform ligament (p = 0.0006). The ligaments with the most severe involvement were the spring ligament complex (superomedial and inferomedial calcaneonavicular ligaments) and the talocalcaneal interosseous ligament. Conclusion: Ligament involvement is extensive in PTTI, and the spring ligament complex is the most frequently affected. Because ligament pathology in PTTI is nearly as common as posterior tibial tendinopathy, treatment should seek to protect or prevent progressive failure of these ligaments.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental Flatfoot Model: The Contribution of Dynamic LoadingFoot & Ankle International, 2001
- Biomechanics of procedures used in adult flatfoot deformityFoot and Ankle Clinics, 2001
- Rupture of the Posterior Tibial Tendon. Evaluation of Injury of the Spring Ligament and Clinical Assessment of Tendon Transfer and Ligament Repair*Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1997
- Pes Planus in Patients with Posterior Tibial Tendon Insufficiency: Asymptomatic Versus Symptomatic FootFoot & Ankle International, 1997
- Subtalar joint stability: Talocalcaneal interosseous ligament function studied in cadaver specimensActa Orthopaedica, 1997
- Gross, Histological, and Microvascular Anatomy and Biomechanical Testing of the Spring Ligament ComplexFoot & Ankle International, 1996
- Biomechanical Evaluation of Longitudinal Arch StabilityFoot & Ankle, 1993
- Adult Acquired Flatfoot Deformity at the Talonavicular Joint: Reconstruction of the Spring Ligament in an in Vitro ModelFoot & Ankle, 1992
- Clinical Significance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Preoperative Planning for Reconstruction of Posterior Tibial Tendon RupturesFoot & Ankle, 1992
- LETTER TO THE EDITORAmerican Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, 1990