Dynamic Splinting After Extensor Hallucis Longus Tendon Repair A
Transcription
Dynamic Splinting After Extensor Hallucis Longus Tendon Repair A
Dynamic Splinting After Extensor Hallucis Longus Tendon Repair A Case Report HILLEL SKOFF Surgery often is recommended to prevent the symptomatic hallux flexus and equinus deformity that may result from traumatic laceration of the extensor hallucis longus (EHL) tendon. Surgical repair of the EHL tendon, however, may cause scarring and adhesion formation that results in a loss of EHL tendon function. Dynamic splinting may be used during rehabilitation to prevent these complications. The purpose of this case report is to describe the use of dynamic splinting in the treatment of a patient after EHL tendon laceration and surgical repair. Key Words: Lower extremity, ankle and foot; Orthotics/splints/casts, lower extremity; Tendon injuries. Disruption of the extensor hallucis longus (EHL) tendon is uncommon and usually results from traumatic laceration. Unlike the long extensor tendons to the digits, which can be sacrificed with near impunity, surgical repair of the EHL tendon is recommended to prevent symptomatic hallux flexus and equinus deformity.1,2 An important complication of EHL tendon repair, however, is postsurgical scarring and adhesion formation that results in a loss of great toe function.3 The purpose of this case report is to describe how dynamic splinting can be used to prevent complications of EHL tendon repair. ASSESSMENT The patient was a 25-year-old woman who reported pain in her right hallux and an inability to extend her great toe as a result of a laceration caused by a wedge of sharp glass. A physical examination revealed a clean transverse laceration over the dorsum of her right first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint. The severed ends of the EHL tendon were visible at the base of the wound. Sensory examination response distal to the laceration was within normal limits. Vascular examination findings were also within normal limits. A motor examination, conducted with the ankle joint at 90 degrees, revealed an inability to extend the interphalangeal joint of the right great toe, although 15 degrees of active MTP joint extension was demonstrated. The extensor hallucis brevis muscle was tested at Fair muscle strength, with pain. The EHL muscle could not be graded but was noted to be contractile. The patient's gait was antalgic to the right. TREATMENT The patient was taken to the operating room, where the wound was irrigated, the EHL tendon primarily repaired, and H. Skoff, MD, is Instructor of Orthopaedic and Plastic Surgery, Beth Israel Hospital/Harvard Medical School, 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215 (USA). He was Hand and Orthopaedic Fellow, Princess Margaret Rose Hospital, Edinburgh, Scotland, and Instructor of Orthopaedic Surgery, School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, CT, when this report was written. This article was submitted June 25, 1986; was with the author for revision 23 weeks; and was accepted March 30, 1987. Potential Conflict of Interest: 4. Volume 68 / Number 1, January 1988 the skin sutured. The patient's limb was placed postoperatively in a short-leg plaster of Paris cast with toe plate, the ankle at 90 degrees, the MTP joint in about 10 degrees of extension, and the interphalangeal joint in 0 degrees of extension. One week after surgery, the patient requested the removal of the cast because her employment precluded the wearing of a cast while on duty. Because the EHL tendon repair required further protection, a dynamic splint was fashioned to allow active hallux flexion while maintaining the first MTP and interphalangeal joints in passive extension. The splint was worn under the patient's regular clothing and therefore was acceptable in her work place. The technique for splint application was similar to that of dynamic splinting in the upper extremity. A metal clip was glued to the dorsal nail plate of the hallux. A second clip was sewn to the anterior strap of a Velcro anklet. A rubber band then was suspended between the two clips with sufficient tension to restrict active plantar flexion of both MTP and interphalangeal joints to 0 degrees of extension, with the ankle at 90 degrees (Fig. 1). The patient was instructed to wear the splint full time for three weeks and to refrain from activities other than walking or standing. Her gait pattern during the early splinting period showed a shorter stride length, decreased velocity, right-sided antalgia, increased right hip and knee flexion (mild steppage gait), decreased forefoot ground clearance, and decreased deceleration from heel-strike to foot flat. After the pain subsided in the hallux, the patient returned to an essentially normal gait pattern. Beginning with postoperative week five, the patient was instructed to remove the rubber band for exercise periods of active right hallux extension supervised by a physical therapist. Use of the dynamic splint was discontinued after postoperative week six. The patient then was instructed to restrict her activity to walking and standing without any type of immobilization for six more weeks. Follow-up examination at three months after surgery revealed that active extension of the right hallux was equal to that of the left hallux: 50 degrees at the MTP joint and 10 degrees at the interphalangeal joint, with the ankle at 90 degrees. Muscle testing revealed the right EHL muscle to be at Good strength compared with Normal strength for the left EHL muscle. The patient's gait was normal. She was allowed to resume jogging 75 and noncontact sports as desired. A follow-up examination at six months revealed the patient to be without pain or deformity. The right EHL muscle was at Normal strength on muscle testing. The patient demonstrated full range of motion at the MTP and interphalangeal joints and ambulated with a normal gait. She was discharged without activity restriction. DISCUSSION Dynamic splinting has become an accepted mode of rehabilitation after tendon laceration and surgical repair.4 Although Bunnell recommended dynamic splinting 40 years ago, to prevent postoperative and postinjury adhesion formation,5 the use of dynamic splints did not become widespread until the biology of tendon healing was better delineated. Researchers in the 1950s and 1960s stressed the importance of adhesions to injured tendons from surrounding soft tissue as a necessary source of fibroblasts and tendon nutrition.6,7 This extrinsic pathway of tendon healing requires immobilization and creates a susceptibility to permanent limitation of tendon excursion, particularly where tendons glide through fibrous pulleys. More recently, the intrinsic pathway of tendon healing has been promulgated. This concept stresses the importance of postinjury tenoblastic proliferation, nourished by synovial fluid.8,9 The intrinsic pathway does not require immobilization and has been used to support the application of early mobilization. Both pathways currently are thought to contribute to tendon healing, modulated by the severity of the injury, the added surgical trauma, and the rapidity of postoperative mobilization. Although not accepted universally,10 the reported benefits of early tendon mobilization, such as improved tendon healing and superior clinical results,1112 serve as the basis for dynamic splinting. The clinical relevance of tendon healing and mobilization traditionally has been associated with surgery of the hand; nevertheless, its relevance to surgery of the foot should not be overlooked.13 On the dorsum of the foot, for example, the EHL tendon passes under fourfibrouspulleys before its insertion (Fig. 2).2 In the largest series of reported EHL tendon lacerations, surgical repair was advised.14 The trauma of both EHL tendon disruption and surgical repair, however, might cause adhesions that restrict tendon gliding.3 Dynamic splinting is a more physiologic alternative to postoperative immobilization of the EHL tendon.5 Fig. 1. Application of dynamic splint after extensor hallucis longus tendon repair. CONCLUSION In this case report, a patient's EHL tendon was repaired surgically and mobilized early with dynamic splinting. The patient achieved a good clinical result. Dynamic splinting after EHL tendon repair had not been reported previously, but it should be considered as an alternative mode of rehabilitation after tendon surgery in the foot. REFERENCES 1. Mann R: Miscellaneous afflictions of the foot. In Mann R (ed): Surgery of the Foot, ed 5. St. Louis, MO, C V Mosby Co, 1986, pp 255-256 2. Tachdjian MO: The Child's Foot. Philadelphia, PA, W B Saunders Co, 1985, pp11,456-457 3. Jahss MH: Disorders of the Foot. Philadelphia, PA, W B Saunders Co, 1982, vol 1,p 864 4. Lister GD, Kleinert HE, Kutz JE, et al: Primary flexor tendon repair followed by immediate controlled mobilization. J Hand Surg [Am] 2:441-455,1977 5. Bunnell S: Active splinting of the hand. J Bone Joint Surg 28:732-736, 1946 6. Lindsay WK, Birch JR: The fibroblast in flexor tendon healing. Plast Reconstr Surg 34:223-232,1964 76 Fig. 2. Anatomy of the extensor hallucis longus tendon and the dorsal pulleys. (Reprinted with permission from M. O. Tachdjian and W B Saunders Co2) 7. Skoog T, Persson BT: An experimental study of the early healing of tendons. Plast Reconstr Surg 13:384-399,1954 8. Lundborg G: Experimental flexor tendon healing without adhesion formation: A new concept of tendon nutrition and intrinsic healing mechanisms. Hand 8:235-238,1976 9. Matthews P, Richards H: The repair potential of digital flexor tendons. J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 56:618-625,1974 10. Potenza AD: Flexor tendon injuries. In Evarts CM (ed): Surgery of the Musculoskeletal System. New York, NY, Churchill Livingstone Inc, 1983, vol1,p233 11. Gelberman RH, Woo SL-Y, Lothringer K, et al: Effects of early intermittent passive mobilization on healing canine flexor tendons. J Hand Surg [Am] 7:170-175,1982 12. Strickland JW, Glogovac SV: Digital function following flexor tendon repair in zone 2: A comparison study of immobilization and controlled passive motion. J Hand Surg [Am] 5:537-543,1980 13. Peacock E: Dynamic splinting for the prevention and correction of hand deformities. J Bone Joint Surg [Am] 34:789-796,1952 14. Floyd DW, Hechman JD, Rockwood CA Jr: Tendon lacerations in the foot. Foot Ankle 4:8-14,1983 PHYSICAL THERAPY