Increasing consensus on terminology of Achilles tendon-related disorders
2021; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 29; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/s00167-021-06566-z
ISSN1433-7347
AutoresK. T. M. Opdam, Ruben Zwiers, Johannes I. Wiegerinck, C. Niek van Dijk, Claire Topliss, Ana Rita Gaspar, N. Moreno, Ananya Puttaraju, Yiu-Chung Lau, A. Grauls, Caio Nery, Allan David Mora, Dimitrios Tsoukas, Ioannis Spanos, Nikolaos E. Koukoulias, Francesco Lijoi, Youichi Yasui, D. Guzenko, Maayke van Sterkenburg, Piotr Żbikowski, Bogusław Sadlik, Manuel Santos Carvalho, Predrag Rašović, Vladan Stevanović, C. Blasco, Nagib Atallah Yordi, Jorge Batista, Cristhopher Stoffel, Noé Gomes Borges Júnior, Fernando Martínez, Judith Leblanc, Gergely Pánics, S. Varghese, Senthilvelan Rajagopalan, Ashok S. Gavaskar, Antonio Marmotti, Vytautas Kimtys, Grzegorz Hajduk, Paulo N. F. Ferrao, Peter Hemmingsson, М. Л. Головаха, Om Lahoti, J. Davenport, James R. McWilliam, Gert Van Gompel, Ferdinand Krappel, Yueliang Zhu, Georgios Antoniades, Francisco Flores Santos, Sefa Giray Batıbay, S. Verfaillie, João Brandão, André Luís Rocha de Souza, M. Vuldzhev, Dong Xiang, Oscar Castro Aragon, Ivan Bojanić, Ivo Rakovac, Heidi Haapasalo, Alar Toom, Christian Plaaß, Markus Baacke, Hazibullah Waizy, Niv Dreiangel, Ezequiel Palmanovich, Nicolò Martinelli, Alessandro Ortolani, Paolo Sicchiero, Jun Sasahara, Luis A. Gómez-Carlín, Gino Kerkhoffs, Christiaan J. A. van Bergen, Gythe H. Bulstra, Mikkel Østerheden Andersen, A. Wojciech, Andrzej Boszczyk, Gonçalo Martinho, João Vide, Manuel Sousa, E. P. Sorokin, J.R. Lansdaal, Shafic Said Al-Nammari, T. Syed, Vishal Upadhyay, IJ Bissell, Michael Dunning, Adam Ajis, Ben Rudge, M. Pinheiro, Jorge Javier Del Vecchio, Richard Freihaut, Cathleen N. Brown, Max van den Bogaert, Mauro Cesar Mattos e Dinato, Miguel Viana Pereira Filho, C. Bustamante, J C Kalb, Dimitrios Nikolopoulos, Dimitrios Hatziemmanuil, Panagiotis D. Symeonidis, Theofanis Vasilakakos, T. Thorvardarson, James Walsh, G. Favilli, Pier Luigi Guidi, Abdulsalam Shuaibu, Pietro Spennacchio, Michel van den Bekerom, Ari Bertz, Henryk Liszka, Hélder Pereira, Acácio Ramos, Rodica Marinescu, Jorge Manuel Teixeira de Azevedo, Andreas Engvall, G. Cserhati, B. Sghaier, Olusegun Aiyenuro, Christopher Marquis, T. Barwick, Christopher E. Gross, Ernesto Pereira, Vitalijs Pasters, M. Monteagudo, Modest Orduña-Moncusí, S Burtt, S. Chandrashekar, H. Shalaby, Richard Thomas, Harish Kurup,
Tópico(s)Nail Diseases and Treatments
ResumoAbstract Purpose Aims of this study are to evaluate the current terminology and assess the influence of the latest proposals on the terminology used for Achilles tendon-related disorders in both daily practice and literature. Methods (1) All orthopedic surgeons experienced in the field of foot and ankle surgery of the Ankleplatform Study Group were invited to participate in this survey by email. They were requested to fill out a survey on terminology in six typical cases with Achilles tendon-related disorders. (2) A systematic literature search of Achilles tendon-related disorders was performed in eight foot and ankle journals in Medline, Embase (Classic) from 2000 to 2016. All extracted terms were counted and compared to the terminology proposals, based on anatomic location, symptoms, clinical findings and histopathology. Results (1) In total, 141 of the 283 (50%) orthopedic surgeons responded to the survey. In five out of six cases with Achilles tendon-related disorders, the majority gave an answer according to latest proposals. (2) An overview of terminology used for Achilles tendon-related disorders from 2000 to 2016 shows an increase in use of terminology according to the latest proposals based on anatomic location, symptoms, clinical findings and histopathology. Conclusion The revised terminology for Achilles tendon-related disorders based on anatomic location, symptoms, clinical findings and histopathology is used by the majority of orthopedic surgeons and is increasingly used in the literature. However, the indistinct Haglund eponyms are still frequently used in Achilles tendon-related terminology. Level of evidence Level IV.
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