Background: Decreased motion of the subtalar joint is common after
operative treatment of idiopathic clubfeet. The purposes of this study were to
validate parameters of dynamic foot-pressure measurement that enable detection
of physiological pronation of the subtalar joint and to analyze the
consequences of absent or decreased pronation following clubfoot surgery on
long-term functional results.
Methods: To validate parameters of dynamic foot-pressure
measurement, we initially analyzed two control groups: one of forty
asymptomatic normal feet and the other of five feet with a previous subtalar
joint arthrodesis. The resulting parameters were then applied to a group of
nineteen patients with twenty-four idiopathic clubfeet for whom initial
conservative treatment had failed and in whom a posterior surgical release
(lengthening of the Achilles tendon and release of the posterior ankle
capsule) had been performed at a mean age of twenty months. The mean duration
of follow-up was forty-one years. All feet were evaluated radiographically,
and the clinical results were assessed with the American Orthopaedic Foot and
Ankle Society score.
Results: An interruption in the rise of the pressure-time curve and
a short medial deviation of the center of pressure path immediately after heel
strike are reliable and objective characteristics of pronation movement of the
subtalar joint. Nineteen clubfeet had a demonstrable pronation movement, and
five clubfeet did not. The nineteen feet with pronation movement were either
asymptomatic (twelve feet) or mildly painful on occasion (seven feet). The
mean American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society score for the nineteen feet
was 87 points. The five feet without pronation movement were moderately
painful during strenuous activities only (four feet) or were nearly always
painful (one foot). The mean score for those feet was 57 points. There was a
significant difference between these two groups with regard to the pain scores
and the total scores (p < 0.001), but there was no appreciable difference
regarding function and hindfoot motion. It was not possible to distinguish
between these two groups on the basis of the findings of the physical or
radiographic examinations.
Conclusions: Idiopathic clubfeet with preserved hindfoot pronation
have a better long-term prognosis. Preservation of functional mobility of the
subtalar joint is a key factor in the treatment of clubfoot deformity.