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Congenital talipes equinovarus
2011♦ Aetiology of idiopathic congenital talipes equinovarus remains unknown♦ Antenatal diagnosis is common with good differentiation of the idiopathic from the syndromic foot♦ The Ponseti method is the treatment of choice: results are poorer in the atypical and syndromic feet♦ Surgery is required in selected cases as the primary treatment and in others ...
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Congenital Talipes Equinovarus
2019There has been a paradigm shift in the treatment of clubfoot since the Ponseti technique was introduced and later validated. Today, it is considered the standard of care in the treatment of idiopathic clubfoot deformity. There is a place for surgical correction in the more recalcitrant and rigid deformities.
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Treatment of Congenital Talipes Equinovarus
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1970W W, Lovell, C I, Hancock
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Congenital Talipes Equinovarus (Clubfoot)
2016Congential talipes equinovarus (CTEV) is a congenital disorder affecting the foot which presents at birth with the hindfoot in equinus and varus, the midfoot in adduction and often cavus and the forefoot adducted.
Joanna Thomas, Matthew Barry
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The Anatomy of Congenital Talipes Equinovarus
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1963The anatomical findings in sixteen dissected specimens of infantile congenital talipes equinovarus have been described. The findings were uniform and essentially the same as those found in forty-four of the fifty-two previously reported dissections. Congenital talipes equinovarus is a composite deformity involving all of the tissues of the foot. There
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The outcomes of idiopathic congenital talipes equinovarus
Bone & Joint Open, 2022Yael Gelfer +2 more
exaly
The Clubfoot: Congenital Talipes Equinovarus
2009The clubfoot is a common, classic, paediatric orthopaedic problem. Every orthopaedic surgeon knows what the deformity looks like but most find it more difficult to describe or to define. The etiology is still largely unknown but ideas about treatment have changed considerably over the last few years.
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Clubfoot: congenital talipes equinovarus.
Journal of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, 1995Congenital talipes equinovarus (ctev) occurs in approximately 1.2 per thousand live births in the UK. The prevalence is less in Orientals (0.6 per thousand), and higher in Hawaiians (6.8 per thousand) and in East Africans. The aetiology is still obscure, but Ruth Wynne-Davies' view has yet to be challenged, that there is a genetic component with an ...
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