Publication:

High prevalence of tarsal coalitions and tarsal joint variants in a recent cadaver sample and its possible significance

Date

Date

Date
2003
Journal Article
Published version

Citations

Citation copied

Rühli, F. J., Solomon, L. B., & Henneberg, M. (2003). High prevalence of tarsal coalitions and tarsal joint variants in a recent cadaver sample and its possible significance. Clinical Anatomy, 16(5), 411–415. https://doi.org/10.1002/ca.10146

Abstract

Abstract

Abstract

Tarsal coalitions (TC) are defined as fibrous (beyond normal ligaments), cartilaginous, or osseous unions of at least two tarsal bones. Most of the clinical studies report the prevalence of TC as <1%, but they disregard the asymptomatic coalitions. Because TC have been associated with pathologic conditions, including degenerative arthritic changes, knowledge of their prevalence has clinical importance. The aim of our study was to establish the prevalence of TC and tarsal joint variants. A total of 114 feet from 62 cadavers (average ag

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Creators (Authors)

  • Rühli, Frank J
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Solomon, L B
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Henneberg, M
    affiliation.icon.alt

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Volume

Volume

Volume
16

Number

Number

Number
5

Page Range

Page Range

Page Range
411

Page end

Page end

Page end
415

Item Type

Item Type

Item Type
Journal Article

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Keywords

Anatomy, Histology, General Medicine

Language

Language

Language
English

Publication date

Publication date

Publication date
2003-09-01

Date available

Date available

Date available
2010-03-26

Publisher

Publisher

Publisher

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN
0897-3806

OA Status

OA Status

OA Status
Closed

PubMed ID

PubMed ID

PubMed ID

Citations

Citation copied

Rühli, F. J., Solomon, L. B., & Henneberg, M. (2003). High prevalence of tarsal coalitions and tarsal joint variants in a recent cadaver sample and its possible significance. Clinical Anatomy, 16(5), 411–415. https://doi.org/10.1002/ca.10146

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