Hallux Valgus: Difference between revisions

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== Mechanism of Injury / Pathological Process<br> ==
== Mechanism of Injury / Pathological Process<br> ==


add text here relating to the mechanism of injury and/or pathology of the condition<br>
The exact etiology is not well established, however, certain factors have been considered to play a role in the development of hallux valgus.&nbsp; Gender(10x more frequent in women), shoewear (tight pointed shoes), congenital deformity or predisposition, chronic achilles tightness, severe flatfoot, hypermobility of the first metatarsocunieform joint, and systemic disease.


== Clinical Presentation  ==
== Clinical Presentation  ==

Revision as of 04:14, 17 December 2009

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Clinically Relevant Anatomy
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Mechanism of Injury / Pathological Process
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The exact etiology is not well established, however, certain factors have been considered to play a role in the development of hallux valgus.  Gender(10x more frequent in women), shoewear (tight pointed shoes), congenital deformity or predisposition, chronic achilles tightness, severe flatfoot, hypermobility of the first metatarsocunieform joint, and systemic disease.

Clinical Presentation[edit | edit source]

Hallux valgus is a deformity in which the medial eminence becomes prominent as the proximal phalanx deviates laterally.  With progression, the pull of the adductor hallucis tendon and the intermetatarsal ligament cause the sesmoids to erode the cristae underneath the first metatarsal cuasing the sesmoids to sublux laterally. 

Diagnostic Procedures[edit | edit source]

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Outcome Measures[edit | edit source]

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Management / Interventions
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Differential Diagnosis
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Resources
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