By Dr Owen Mattern MBBS | Unaccredited Orthopaedic Registrar
References
- JAAOS 2009;17:306-317
- Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics 11th Ed
- DeLee and Drez’s Orthopaedics Sports Medicine 3rd Edition
Anatomy
- Peroneus brevis and longus
- Primary action eversion and pronation
- Weak plantar flexors
- Lateral ankle stabilizers
- Supplied by superficial peroneal nerve
- Blood supply by perforating branches anterior tibial and peroneal arteries
- Stability – midstance and heel-raise portions of gait
- Cross ankle joint in common tunnel and sheath
- Sheath bifurcates at peroneal tubercle
- Peroneus Brevis Tendon
- Anterior and medial to PLT
- Inserts into dorsolateral tubercle 5th MT
- Peroneus Longus Tendon
- Lateral and posterior to PBT
- Inserts into lateral base 1st MT and medial cunieform
- Both have good blood supply
- Superior Peroneal Retinaculum
- Fibrous band that blends with periosteum
- Posterior ridge of fibula to lateral wall calcaneum
- Attached to a fibrocartilaginous rim that deepens groove in posterior fibula
- Anomalous Anatomy
- Some variants may predispose to lax SPR increasing risk of pathology
- Anomalous muscle
- Peroneus quadratus (13-21%)
- Peroneus digiti quinti (of Testut)
- Peronealcalcaneus muscle (of Heckman)
- Low lying PB muscle belly
- Anomalous muscle
- Possible boney tunnel causing impingment
- Some variants may predispose to lax SPR increasing risk of pathology
Classification
- Disorders of Peroneal Tendons
- Tendinitis without subluxation
- Middle-aged athletes
- Attritional ruptures can occur
- • Tendinitis with peroneal tendon instability at SPR
- Young athletes, acute ankle injury of chronic ankle instability
- Rupture of SPR
- • Stenosing tenosynovitis of PLT
- Often with painful os perineum
- Secondary to boney tunnel at the level of cuboid
- Tendinitis without subluxation
Examination
- Often have concominant lateral ankle instability
- Need to check for tendon subluxation
- Tendon strength, subluxation, peroneal compression test (popping, pain and crepitus at posterior distal fibula on forced eversion), pain and swelling along tendon, pseudotumour
- Hindfoot varus – need to assess for charcot marie tooth and other motor neuropathies
- Assess for hindfoot varus, high arch, limitation of subtalar movement in eversion
- All predispose to peroneal pathology due to increased forces through the tendons
Investigations
- Plain xrays – MUST INCLUDE WB
- Ultrasound
- >1mm of fluid of tendon thickening indicates tendinosis
- Can help diagnose subluxing tendons
- CT
- Especially for bony abnormalities
- MRI
- Normal tendon low signal intensity in T1, T2 and STIR
- Increased intensity on T2/STIR may indicate tear, tendinosis or tenosynovitis
Treatment
Tenosynovitis/tendinitis
- Result of repetitive or prolonged activity
- Pain, swelling and point tenderness often wit recent trauma
- Rx
- RICE, NSAID’s, ankle brace, lateral heel wedge orthosis
- Any surgery needs to address underlying problem as well as treating and debriding tendon/tendon sheath
- Often surgery is for tears
Partial Tears
- Cadaveric study showed tendon to splay and flatten after compression over fibular groove
- Most commonly PBT
- Up to 83% failure rate for conservative Rx
- Good return to work (90%) but variable return to sport following repair (46-95%)
- Krause and Brodsky grading system
- Grade 1 <50%
- Direct repair
- Grade 2 >50%
- tenodesis
- Grade 1 <50%
Complete Tears
- More common in
- T2DM, RA, steroid injection, injuries associated with tendon subluxation
- Concomitant tears graded by Redfern and Myerson
- Grading
- Type 1 – both tendons repairable
- Type 2 – one tendon repairable
- Type 3 – neither tendon repairable
- Treated 29 patients according to protocol and had a mean improvement from 61 to 82 of AOFAS score
- Grading
- Wapner
- Wapner reported method for treatment of concominant tears
- 2-stage procedure
- Silastic rod attached distally to tendon to create synovial sheath
- 3/12 later FHL tendon transfer and reconstruction to distal tendon
- 6/7 patients pain-free at 8.5 years
- Wapner reported method for treatment of concominant tears
Subluxation and Dislocation
- Commonly reported in skiers
- 0.5% of all skiing injuries are complete peroneal dislocation
- Result of forceful dorsiflexion and eversion
- Recreated by circumduction and eversion
- Often mis-diagnosed as ankle sprain in acute injury
- Four grades (Eckert and Davis 1976, Oden 1987)
- Grade 1 – elevation of SPR and periosteum with tendon lying between periosteum and bone
- Grade 2 – elevation of SPR with fibrocartliage ridge
- Grade 3 – Cortical avulsion fracture
- Grade 4 – tear of SPR from calcaneal and achilles tendon
- Rx of acute dislocations controversial
- Small sample sizes with mixed outcomes
- Some efficacy for plaster 5-6/52
- Poor responses to taping
- Overall poor response in up to 50% of cases
- Still recommend trial non-operative
- 4- 6/52 in BKPOP with tendons reduced
- Surgical Rx often involves direct repair SPR
Chronic dislocation
- >50% poor results
- Rx options
- SPR reconstruction with tendon sling
- Bone blocks
- Groove deepening procedures
- Rerouting procedures
- SPR reattachment and reinforcement with local tissue
- Jones tissue transfer technique
- described in 1932
- slip of achilles passed 1 inch above lateral malleolus
- Tendon slip needs to be anchored with foot in dorsiflexion and supination
- 6/52 in short leg POP
- Results: Escalas 1980
- 28 procedures.
- 15 patients were followed for 6.8years.
- 14/15 excellent results.
- 1/15 reported instability of lateral ankle but none found clinically.
- 3/15 decrease in hindfoot inversion, 4/15 lost 7degrees of dorsiflexion
- CAN ALSO USE OTHER TENDONS – redundant peroneus quartus to reconstruct SPR
- described in 1932
- Kelly bone block procedure and modification – 1920
- Modification eliminated surgical fixation
- DuVries modification
- Marti 1977, Micheli et al 1989 and Mason et al 1996 – good results.
- Some crepitation of tendons thought to result from inferior posterior displacement.
- Immobilized for 5-8/52
- DuVries modification
- Modification eliminated surgical fixation
- Groove Deepening
- Zoellner/Clancy –
- raise an osteoperiosteal flap,
- cancellous bone removed 6-9mm and flap reimpacted.
- Excellent results in 10 patients.
- Immobilized for 3-6/52 in POP then ankle hinge.
- Other studies of 17 patients reported excellent results.
- Can be used in conjunction with a periosteal flap
- Zoellner/Clancy –
Summary
- Uncommon injuries
- Tears often need to be debrided +/- tenodesis
- Acute subluxation of tendons can trial non-operative management
- Chronic subluxation of tendons needs a surgical intervention
- No strong evidence for any procedure over others
- In all cases you need to correct any underlying foot deformity for best outcome