Guest guest Posted December 5, 2004 Report Share Posted December 5, 2004 I e-mailed Dr. Poseti a picture of my son's recently corrected feet, they are still in casts, and he mentioned they looked short. He wondered if they were atypical and said I may need to use the shoes. I've read that atypical feet have a crease across the sole, but my son's feet do not have that. Can he have atypical clubfeet without the crease? I want to be prepared ahead of time to mention the shoes to our doctor. I did ask him once if had atypical clubfeet and he didn't really answer. and 11/10/03 bilateral clubfeet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 5, 2004 Report Share Posted December 5, 2004 " Atypical Clubfoot " is esentially a catch-all phrase that refers to any clubfoot that either responds to casting differently or is different in some very basic was, such as one aspect of the foot being vastly more or less severe than the rest of the deformity. It pretty much meand different in some way than usually seen. Because of this, not all aspects seen in one atypical clubfoot are seen in others. Also, the casting and treatment done can have a huge impact on what the foot looks like at the time of diagnosis. My sons foot is a good example of the variety seen. He has what is called plantaris (the most common type of atypical clubfoot) where the muscles and ligaments in the bottom of the foot are very tight and prone to relapse. However, a plantaris usually takes many casts to correct and for him it really took very few. The one relapse he had that resulted in 4 casts had alot to do with Dr Mosca being new to the casting correction of atypical, as well as the wait for the shoes (his 4th cast was applied to an already-corrected foot). Also, unlike most cases of plantaris-type atypical, he did not get out of the Markell shoes, they just did not work. The one other thing that was way different is that his foot became more deformed while in the post-tenotomy cast. Most feet similar to his relapse or gain deformity AFTER that cast has been removed. As for the shoes, all I can say is that the shoes will not harm the foot in any way - atypical or not, whereas if you are dealing with an atypical clubfoot, the Markell shoes could be damaging, so, it cant hurt to use the 's if there is any doubt. Angel > > > > > I e-mailed Dr. Poseti a picture of my son's recently corrected > feet, > > they are still in casts, and he mentioned they looked short. He > > wondered if they were atypical and said I may need to use the > > shoes. > > > > I've read that atypical feet have a crease across the sole, but my > > son's feet do not have that. Can he have atypical clubfeet without > > the crease? I want to be prepared ahead of time to mention the > > shoes to our doctor. I did ask him once if had > > atypical clubfeet and he didn't really answer. > > > > and 11/10/03 bilateral clubfeet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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