Title: Management of the Partial Foot Amputee
1Management of the Partial Foot Amputee
- Gait Workshop at
- Biomechanics Laboratory,
- U of Sydney
- July 2005
2- 3.2.2 SURGICAL GOALS
- 'To remove the pathologic condition which
interferes with function, causes disability or
threatens life so that rehabilitation can be
instituted' (Mueller and Sinacore, 1994).
Figure 1 - Lines of standard forefoot/midfoot
amputations (From Vitali, et al., 1978, pp. 128).
3- Biomechanical Complications
- www.gentili.net.amputations
- An equinus deformity often results from forefoot
amputations, especially the Lisfranc
(metatarsocuneiform joint) and the Chopart
(talonavicular and calcaneocubiod joints)
amputation (Chang, et al., 1995). - In a TMA the tendons of extensor hallucis longus,
extensor digitorum longus and peroneus tertius
muscles are sectioned. These muscles act to
dorsiflex the foot at the ankle, if they are
sectioned, an imbalance between the anterior and
posterior muscle groups exists. This leads to the
Achilles tendon working unopposed, thus creating
an equinus deformity (Barry, et al., 1993). To
overcome this, an Achilles tendon lengthening
procedure is performed. - This loss of dorsiflexion range of motion can
lead to excessive loading at the distal edge of
the residuum during gait and lead to skin
breakdown (Chang, et al., 1994).
43.2.5 SURGICAL TECHNIQUE The following surgical
technique is summarised from Gregory, Peters and
Harkless, 1992. Figure 5 illustrates a
transmetatarsal amputation procedure.
Figure 5 - Transmetatarsal amputation procedure
(From Sanders, 1986, pp. 102).
5Partial Foot Gait
- Dr Michael Dillon
- Clinical observation suggests
- Residuum rotates within shoe/prosthesis
- Prostheses do not have a socket
- Prostheses do not have a stiff toe lever
- Triceps surae atrophy
- Reduced plantarflexion
- Amputees cant stand on their toes
6Literature suggests
- Prostheses restore the lost foot length or
lever-arm (Condie 1970, Rubin 1984, Pullen 1987,
Stills 1987, Weber 1991, Mueller and Sinacore
1994, Saunders 1997, Sobel 2000) - Function is improved by maintaining residual foot
length and ankle motion (Wagner 1985, Mueller et
al1986, Barry etal 1993, Helm 1994, Pinzur at al
1997, Sobel 2000) - MYTHS??
7Method
- Amputee subjects (n8),
- 5 unilat (TMT, Lisfranc, Chopart)
- 3 bilat (MTP, Lisfranc, Chopart)
- Aetiology trauma or gangrene
- Normal subjects (n8), age, ht, wt, sex matched
- Apparatus Peak Motus 3D motion analysis system,
AMTI force platform
8Partial Foot Gait
- For all conditions the motion is biased towards
DF. The forefoot should contribute 10 degrees of
plantarflexion relative to rearfoot. There is
none in barefoot PFA in preparation for toe-off
and closer to normal with boot and CTO. - Knee is held at gt10 degrees F throughout the gait
cycle. Knee F is delayed, amplitude diminished
in barefoot. - Over stance phase the hip moved from a flexed
position to extended position, and returns to
flexion during swing phase. Amplitude is
diminished in barefoot.
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11Moment
- Is the rotational version of force. It is the
turning effect around the centre of rotation. It
is generated by muscles or an external force
acting on the segment. Magnitude of a moment
depends on size of the force and the distance
from the centre of rotation. (Newton.metres)
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13Partial Foot Gait
- Ankle moment in barefoot is toward plantarflexion
throughout stance. VGRF vector remained
posterior to the ankle joint centre. - Traditional and CTO bring ankle jt moment in
sagittal plane closer to normal, but only at 30
stance. - Knee has F moment to 20 stance, E moment to 50
stance, F moment again to 80, then E to toe off.
Boot is more normal, CTO is further towards
normal. - Hip has extensor moment in first half of stance
and flexor in the second half. Moments increase
from barefoot to Traditional to CTO. F moment in
barefoot is delayed to after toe-off, but before
toe-off for traditional and CTO.
14Power
- Is the rate at which work is done. The moment
multiplied by the angular velocity of the joint.
The area under the power curve is the work done
for that period.
15Joint Power
- Is an indication of how hard the muscles around
that joint are working. - Is the rate at which energy is expended or
absorbed - Area under the graph
- Negative power means muscles are absorbing
energy. - Positive power means energy is generated by the
muscles around the joint.
16Partial Foot Gait
- In barefoot, ankle jt power is () generating
from 20 90 of stance. The traditional has
periods of absorption and generation. CTO has
large absorbing periods early in stance and
generation prior to toe-off. - Knee jt powers are near normal.
- Hip jt power have increasing amounts in
traditional and CTO.
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27Results
- Once the MT heads had been amputated, the GRF did
not continue to progress distally along the
length of the residuum but remained well behind
the distal end throughout most of stance phase - In the TMT and Lisfranc Amputees fitted with toe
fillers, foot orthoses or slipper sockets, the
distal end of the residuum was located at 58-65
of shoe length. - The largest VGRF occurred at 45 of the gait
cycle and did not progress past the distal end of
the residuum until after contralateral heel
contact in double limb support.
28- Significant reduction in peak power generation
across the ankle were observed on the affected
limbs of all amputees except the bilat MTP amp. - Bilat MTP amp small reductions in power
generation, COP excursion, but not joint angular
velocity or ankle ROM. - TMT amp power generation 0.72W/kg
- Lisfranc amp power generation 0.91W/kg
- Chopart amp 0.78W/kg (unilat), 0.32W/kg (bilat)
due to elimination of joint range rather than
COP. - Normal 2.56 to 5.06W/kg
- Reduced due to diminished ankle moment coupled
with reduced joint angular velocity.
29Results
- Reductions in work across the affected ankles
were compensated for by increased power
generation at the hip joint (ipsilateral or
contralateral). The kinetic patterns observed
were variable.
30Results
- In the Chopart amputees fitted with clamshell
devices demonstrated the COP was able to progress
well beyond the distal end of the residual limb
shoe length commensurate with the 2nd peak VGRF.
31Discussion
- The COP remained proximal to the distal end of
the residuum until contralateral heel contact - It is difficult to determine why these amputees
adopted this gait pattern - Spare the distal residuum from extreme forces
- Reduce the requirement of the triceps surae
- Toe fillers, foot orthoses, AFOs and slipper
sockets seemed unable to restore the effective
foot length - The clamshell PTB prosthesis incorporated a
substantial socket - Toe levers were made from carbon fibre plates or
prosthetic feet
32Discussion
- One of the primary functions of the ankle is to
generate power necessary to walk. - Once the metatarsal heads were affected, power
generation was negligible irrespective of
residual foot length - Lisfranc and TMT amputees, performed as much work
across the ankle as did the Chopart amputees who
had no ankle motion. - The primary reason for partial foot amputation is
to capitalize on the ankles contribution to
walking. - There is little benefit to be gained by striving
to maintain residual foot length and ankle motion.
33Discussion
- Once amputation has compromised the metatarsal
heads, maintaining foot length should no longer
be the primary surgical objective. - Aim for residuum that has good distal skin
coverage and primary intention healing. - Given that the ankle did not contribute greatly
to the work required to walk and the likelihood
of complications with fitting most amputees,
abandon below ankle designs and go for a
clamshell design where risks are minimized.
34Conclusion
- Gait analysis on normals provided foundation
for our understanding of PFA - Gait analysis was used to provide more accurate
description of gait and prosthetic fitting. - Insights from gait analysis challenged
misconceptions and forced reflection on clinical
practice - Improved understanding of what didnt work has
led clinicians to pursue advancements in design.