Results 221 to 230 of about 21,564 (261)
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Juvenile Hallux Valgus

Foot and Ankle Clinics, 2021
Treatment of juvenile hallux valgus can be challenging. Initial treatment with conservative measures is appropriate until exhausted. Surgical treatment should be delayed until after skeletal maturity when possible. Before any intervention, a thorough understanding of the whole patient and any underlying systemic contributors to their hallux valgus, in ...
Susan T. Mahan, Emily O Cidambi
openaire   +2 more sources

Hallux Valgus

Medical Clinics of North America, 2014
Hallux valgus is a common foot problem whose cause and progression is multifactorial, complex, and poorly known. Hallux valgus shows a predilection toward women. It is a progressive disorder with no treatment known to slow or stop progression. Surgery is indicated in healthy individuals when nonoperative measures fail.
Paul J, Hecht, Timothy J, Lin
openaire   +2 more sources

Hypermobility in Hallux Valgus

Foot and Ankle Clinics, 2020
The interaction between hypermobility and hallux valgus remains both contemporary and incendiary. The difficulty in setting clinical and radiological parameters to diagnose and the complexity of questions that circumnutate the philosophy among etiology and denouement, fires up the debate regarding these conditions.
Caio Nery   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The Pathogenesis of Hallux Valgus

Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 2011
The first ray is an inherently unstable axial array that relies on a fine balance between its static (capsule, ligaments, and plantar fascia) and dynamic stabilizers (peroneus longus and small muscles of the foot) to maintain its alignment. In some feet, there is a genetic predisposition for a nonlinear osseous alignment or a laxity of the static ...
M M Stephens   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Muscle in Hallux Valgus

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1988
Muscle imbalance is cited widely as a major factor in the production of hallux valgus deformity. The authors, therefore, performed muscle biopsies in 57 patients (53 women and four men; average age, 45.3 years) to examine the histology and ultrastructure of the intrinsic muscles about the great toe.
J M Meyer   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

THE ANATOMY OF HALLUX VALGUS

The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume, 1954
1. The anatomy of the forefoot in hallux valgus is compared with the normal, with a review of the literature and descriptions of anatomical preparations, observations at operation and radiographs. 2. The early and essential lesions are stretching of the ligaments on the medial side of the metatarso-phalangeal joint that attach the medial sesamoid and
R. Wheeler Haines, A. Mcdougall
openaire   +2 more sources

Hypermobility in Hallux Valgus

Foot & Ankle, 1988
Hypermobility has been implicated as one of the etiological components in common foot problems such as hallux valgus but has not been substantiated by experimental data. Twenty patients with symptomatic untreated hallux valgus and 20 controls were evaluated with a simple hypermobility scoring system.
Susan Ross   +3 more
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Pediatric Hallux Valgus

Foot and Ankle Clinics, 2014
Hallux valgus in children is a relatively uncommon deformity, also known by several other names such as juvenile or adolescent bunion, metatarsus primus varus, and metatarsus primus adductus. The presence of an open growth plate is considered by most to be part of the definition of this condition.
Sunil Dhar, Julian Chell
openaire   +3 more sources

Hallux valgus and hallux rigidus

Clinical Imaging, 1999
The purpose of this article is to describe the MR findings of Hallux Valgus (HV) and Hallux Rigidus (HR). Twenty-four patients (11 with HV, 4 with HR, and 9 with both HV and HR) were studied at 1.5 Tesla MRI. Two separate observers evaluated the first ray blindly for the following signs: sesamoid position, sesamoid proliferation, hypertrophy of the ...
Noga Shabshin   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Recurrence of Hallux Valgus

Foot and Ankle Clinics, 2014
Recurrence of hallux valgus deformity can be a common complication after corrective surgery. The cause of recurrent hallux valgus is usually multifactorial, and includes patient-related factors such as preoperative anatomic predisposition, medical comorbidities, compliance with postcorrection instructions, and surgical factors such as choice of the ...
Joseph Daniel   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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