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Outcome After Needle vs Blade Achilles Tenotomy in Clubfoot

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Club Foot
Achilles Tendon Surgery
Interventions
Procedure: Achilles tendon tenotomy
Registration Number
NCT04897100
Lead Sponsor
Indus Hospital and Health Network
Brief Summary

Achilles tendon tenotomy is an integral part of the Ponseti method, aimed at correcting residual equinus after correction of the adductus deformity. Tenotomy rates ranging from 63-95% after full cycle of castings have been reported in literature. Percutaneous tenotomy is the gold standard, which can usually be performed in an out-patient setting under local anesthesia using a scalpel blade. A complication rate of 2% (mainly neurovascular injury)has been reported in literature, with accidental sectioning of the peroneal artery being the most common. Development of a pseudo-aneurysm after accidental sectioning of the peroneal artery has been reported in a case report; this delayed further clubfoot treatment.

Percutaneous needle tenotomy has been described by some authors as an alternative technique with very favorable results in a population before walking age. This technique use a large-gauge (16-19 G) needle to percutaneously cut the Achilles tendon. Although bleeding has been reported following this technique with similar rates as for the percutaneous blade technique, no major complications have been reported as yet using the needle technique.

We would like to compare the clinical outcomes and complication rates of both techniques, supporting our hypothesis that both techniques are equally safe and have the same success rate.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
244
Inclusion Criteria
  • Idiopathic clubfoot.
  • Age less than or equal to 36 months at the time of tenotomy.
  • Enrolled at the Pehla Qadam clinic at The Indus Hospital in Karachi.
  • Fully corrected Adductus deformity with residual equinus after a full casting cycle.
  • Completing routine follow up for 3 months post tenotomy.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Refusal of parents to enroll child into this study.
  • Syndromic clubfoot.
  • Previous treatment for clubfoot (surgical or non-surgical) received.
  • Underlying medical conditions unrelated to clubfoot that may serve as a contra-indication, this decision will be left on the discretion of the treating orthopedic surgeon

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Needle tenotomyAchilles tendon tenotomyPatient will receive an Achilles tendon tenotomy using a 22G needle when randomized into the needle group. Follow-up to measure dorsiflexion and register complications will be assured at 3 weeks and 3 months.
Blade tenotomyAchilles tendon tenotomyPatient will receive an Achilles tendon tenotomy using a 11 blade when randomized into the needle group. Follow-up to measure dorsiflexion and register complications will be assured at 3 weeks and 3 months.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Dorsiflexion3 months

Ankle dorsiflexion measured in degrees

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Complications3 months

Post-op complications due to tenotomy

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Indus Hospital

🇵🇰

Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan

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