Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study

Category: Ankle; Hindfoot Introduction/Purpose: Flexor Hallucis Longus (FHL) tendon transfer to the calcaneus is a common adjuvant procedure in the treatment of Achilles pathology. The FHL tendon can be harvested using a posterior incision where the tendon is dissected along its course into the fibr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Caitlin Curtis Crocker BS, Eildar Abyar MD, Sean Young, Fatemah Razaghi MD, Gerald McGwin PhD, Michael D. Johnson MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011420S00181
id doaj-27fef533f9cc436c8ab114ac6f9325aa
record_format Article
spelling doaj-27fef533f9cc436c8ab114ac6f9325aa2021-03-06T03:03:20ZengSAGE PublishingFoot & Ankle Orthopaedics2473-01142020-10-01510.1177/2473011420S00181Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver StudyCaitlin Curtis Crocker BSEildar Abyar MDSean YoungFatemah Razaghi MDGerald McGwin PhDMichael D. Johnson MDCategory: Ankle; Hindfoot Introduction/Purpose: Flexor Hallucis Longus (FHL) tendon transfer to the calcaneus is a common adjuvant procedure in the treatment of Achilles pathology. The FHL tendon can be harvested using a posterior incision where the tendon is dissected along its course into the fibroosseous tunnel. Alternatively, the FHL may be harvested through a separate plantar medial incision as it crosses the flexor digitorium longus at the Knot of Henry. This study aims to quantify FHL tendon lengths achieved through the two common approaches utilizing pair matched cadavers. Methods: Seven pair matched fresh-frozen cadaver legs without signs of musculoskeletal abnormalities were used for this assessment. One leg in each pairing underwent a single incision harvest while the contralateral leg underwent an accessory medial plantar harvest. After dissecting the tendon, a calcaneus tunnel was prepared from dorsal to plantar in both calcanei in standard fashion. Two measurements were obtained. The first measurement was taken from the distal aspect of the muscle belly to the distal end of the tendon. The tendon was then pulled through the calcaneus, and the foot was held in tension at 20 degrees of plantar flexion. The second measurement was taken from site where tendon entered the calcaneous to the distal end of the tendon graft. The measurements were analyzed using Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test and Fischer Exact Test. Results: Using a posterior incision, the mean tendon measurement from calcaneous tunnel to the distal end of the tendon was 4.0 cm. Using an accessory plantar medial incision, the mean tendon measurement from the calcaneous tunnel to the distal end of the tendon was 7.2 cm. The average tunnel length obtained using an accessory medial incision was significantly greater than the length obtained using the single incision approach (p= 0.0003, p=0.0022, and p=0.0016). The accessory plantar medial incision obtained an FHL tendon tunnel length that was an average of 2.9 cm greater than the posterior incision. Conclusion: The single incision approach provided sufficient length to safely anchor the FHL into the calcaneus which suggests that the accessory plantar medial approach is not necessary for routine FHL transfers to the calcaneus with interference screw fixation. However, if additional length is needed for other applications such as posterior tibialis tendon dysfunction or peritoneal tendon tears, the accessory incision does provide an average of 2.9 cm of additional length.https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011420S00181
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caitlin Curtis Crocker BS
Eildar Abyar MD
Sean Young
Fatemah Razaghi MD
Gerald McGwin PhD
Michael D. Johnson MD
spellingShingle Caitlin Curtis Crocker BS
Eildar Abyar MD
Sean Young
Fatemah Razaghi MD
Gerald McGwin PhD
Michael D. Johnson MD
Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study
Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics
author_facet Caitlin Curtis Crocker BS
Eildar Abyar MD
Sean Young
Fatemah Razaghi MD
Gerald McGwin PhD
Michael D. Johnson MD
author_sort Caitlin Curtis Crocker BS
title Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study
title_short Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study
title_full Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study
title_fullStr Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study of Flexor Hallicus Longus Tendon Length through Single Incision or Accessory Plantar Medial Incision: A Cadaver Study
title_sort comparative study of flexor hallicus longus tendon length through single incision or accessory plantar medial incision: a cadaver study
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics
issn 2473-0114
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Category: Ankle; Hindfoot Introduction/Purpose: Flexor Hallucis Longus (FHL) tendon transfer to the calcaneus is a common adjuvant procedure in the treatment of Achilles pathology. The FHL tendon can be harvested using a posterior incision where the tendon is dissected along its course into the fibroosseous tunnel. Alternatively, the FHL may be harvested through a separate plantar medial incision as it crosses the flexor digitorium longus at the Knot of Henry. This study aims to quantify FHL tendon lengths achieved through the two common approaches utilizing pair matched cadavers. Methods: Seven pair matched fresh-frozen cadaver legs without signs of musculoskeletal abnormalities were used for this assessment. One leg in each pairing underwent a single incision harvest while the contralateral leg underwent an accessory medial plantar harvest. After dissecting the tendon, a calcaneus tunnel was prepared from dorsal to plantar in both calcanei in standard fashion. Two measurements were obtained. The first measurement was taken from the distal aspect of the muscle belly to the distal end of the tendon. The tendon was then pulled through the calcaneus, and the foot was held in tension at 20 degrees of plantar flexion. The second measurement was taken from site where tendon entered the calcaneous to the distal end of the tendon graft. The measurements were analyzed using Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test and Fischer Exact Test. Results: Using a posterior incision, the mean tendon measurement from calcaneous tunnel to the distal end of the tendon was 4.0 cm. Using an accessory plantar medial incision, the mean tendon measurement from the calcaneous tunnel to the distal end of the tendon was 7.2 cm. The average tunnel length obtained using an accessory medial incision was significantly greater than the length obtained using the single incision approach (p= 0.0003, p=0.0022, and p=0.0016). The accessory plantar medial incision obtained an FHL tendon tunnel length that was an average of 2.9 cm greater than the posterior incision. Conclusion: The single incision approach provided sufficient length to safely anchor the FHL into the calcaneus which suggests that the accessory plantar medial approach is not necessary for routine FHL transfers to the calcaneus with interference screw fixation. However, if additional length is needed for other applications such as posterior tibialis tendon dysfunction or peritoneal tendon tears, the accessory incision does provide an average of 2.9 cm of additional length.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011420S00181
work_keys_str_mv AT caitlincurtiscrockerbs comparativestudyofflexorhallicuslongustendonlengththroughsingleincisionoraccessoryplantarmedialincisionacadaverstudy
AT eildarabyarmd comparativestudyofflexorhallicuslongustendonlengththroughsingleincisionoraccessoryplantarmedialincisionacadaverstudy
AT seanyoung comparativestudyofflexorhallicuslongustendonlengththroughsingleincisionoraccessoryplantarmedialincisionacadaverstudy
AT fatemahrazaghimd comparativestudyofflexorhallicuslongustendonlengththroughsingleincisionoraccessoryplantarmedialincisionacadaverstudy
AT geraldmcgwinphd comparativestudyofflexorhallicuslongustendonlengththroughsingleincisionoraccessoryplantarmedialincisionacadaverstudy
AT michaeldjohnsonmd comparativestudyofflexorhallicuslongustendonlengththroughsingleincisionoraccessoryplantarmedialincisionacadaverstudy
_version_ 1724229825513652224