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Xue Ling Chong Centre Assal SA, Foot and Ankle Surgery Centre, La Colline, Geneva, Switzerland

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Lisca Drittenbass Centre Assal SA, Foot and Ankle Surgery Centre, La Colline, Geneva, Switzerland

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Victor Dubois-Ferriere Centre Assal SA, Foot and Ankle Surgery Centre, La Colline, Geneva, Switzerland

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Mathieu Assal Centre Assal SA, Foot and Ankle Surgery Centre, La Colline, Geneva, Switzerland

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loading of the forefoot. Causes of iatrogenic transfer metatarsalgia The biomechanics of transfer metatarsalgia, as described earlier, can be understood more easily if we classify its causes based on the planes that they have failed in. As we are

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Haroon Majeed Manchester University Foundation NHS Trust, Manchester, United Kingdom

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difficult to revise if it fails. 7 Initially, silicone implants were popular among surgeons and were utilized in patients who were too young and too active for joint replacement surgery. 8 The initial reports on silastic implants showed higher

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Nikolaos Gougoulias Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, Frimley Park Hospital, Frimley, UK

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Hesham Oshba Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, Frimley Park Hospital, Frimley, UK

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Apostolos Dimitroulias Jacobi Medical Center – Trauma Unit – Bronx, New York, USA

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Anthony Sakellariou Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, Frimley Park Hospital, Frimley, UK

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Alexander Wee Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, Frimley Park Hospital, Frimley, UK

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complications if ankle fractures were managed non-operatively. 8 They also found that the complication rate for secondary surgical fixation after failed initial non-operative management was 100% vs. 12.5% for primary open reduction and internal fixation (p

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Nikolaos Gougoulias Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust. Frimley Park Hospital, UK

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Vasileios Lampridis Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust. Frimley Park Hospital, UK

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Anthony Sakellariou Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust. Frimley Park Hospital, UK

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.g. Keller’s procedure, or other ‘old-fashioned’ osteotomies that cause excessive shortening, failed forefoot surgery), are factors that can result in shortening or elevation and secondary de-functioning of the first ray, thus causing transfer load

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Carlos Maynou CHU Lille, Orthopaedic Department, F-59000 Lille, France

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Christophe Szymanski CHU Lille, Orthopaedic Department, F-59000 Lille, France

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Alexis Thiounn CHU Lille, Orthopaedic Department, F-59000 Lille, France

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Surgery is considered if conservative treatments fail to control the symptoms but operative treatment should only be considered in carefully selected patients. The aim of surgery is to achieve a foot that is plantigrade, mobile and pain-free. In any case

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Jan Bartoníček Department of Orthopaedics, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and Military University Hospital Prague, U Vojenské Nemocnice, Prague, Czech Republic

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Stefan Rammelt University Center for Orthopaedics, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus at TU Dresden, Fetscherstrasse, Dresden, Germany

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Michal Tuček Department of Orthopaedics, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and Military University Hospital Prague, U Vojenské Nemocnice, Prague, Czech Republic

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al. ( 11 ), in 1956, described cyanosis, numbness, and decreased temperature in two patients treated operatively for BF, after repeated attempts at closed reduction had failed. CS associated with BF was for the first time described by Szalay and

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Stefan Rammelt University Center of Orthopaedics & Traumatology, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Dresden, Germany

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pre-contoured interlocking plate is independent of BMD, whereas fixation strength of non-locking screws is dependent on BMD. 26 However, locking plates can fail in osteoporotic bone with either serial cut-out or serial breakage of the locking

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Christopher J. Pearce Jurong Health Services Pte Ltd, Singapore

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Audrey Tan Jurong Health Services Pte Ltd, Singapore

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the insertion of the Achilles into the calcaneus. It is probably most accurate to describe the degenerative process as a failed healing response. 16 Tendinopathy is the commonest pathological condition affecting the tendo Achilles and represents

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Mustafa S. Rashid Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology, and Musculoskeletal Sciences (NDORMS), University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

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Yves Tourné Institut Grenoblois de Chirurgie du Pied, Echirolles, France

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Kar H. Teoh Princess Alexandra Hospital, Harlow, UK

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treated with LIPUS for ununited 5th metatarsal fractures, initially treated conservatively. 7 Clinical and radiological union was achieved in 90%. Two-thirds of those that failed LIPUS treatment were symptomatic and required surgery (one ORIF, one

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Mario Herrera-Pérez Foot and Ankle Unit, Orthopaedic Department, Hospital Universitario de Canarias, Tenerife, Spain
Department of Surgery, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain

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Victor Valderrabano Foot and Ankle Unit, Orthopaedic Department, Schmerzklinik, Basel, Switzerland
University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

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Alexandre L Godoy-Santos Orthopaedic Department, Hospital Israelita, Sao Paulo, Brazil

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César de César Netto Director of the UIOWA Orthopedic Functional Imaging Research Laboratory (OFIRL), Iowa, USA
Department of Orthopedic and Rehabilitation, University of Iowa, Iowa, USA

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David González-Martín Foot and Ankle Unit, Orthopaedic Department, Hospital Universitario de Canarias, Tenerife, Spain
Department of Surgery, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain

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Sergio Tejero Foot and Ankle Unit, Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío, Sevilla, Spain
Department of Surgery, Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain

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-traumatic ankle OA (80% of total) - Inflammatory arthritis - Young and active patients* - Avascular necrosis of the talus^ - Infectious sequelae - Congenital malformations - Neurological foot with malalignment - Failed

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