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1.
J Foot Ankle Surg ; 59(5): 957-960, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32409113

ABSTRACT

The in-step plantar fasciotomy has remained a viable option for treatment of plantar fasciitis. The level of the in-step procedure has previously been described as 1.5 cm distal to the anterior heel fat pad. The authors are unaware of any study defining mean width and thickness of the plantar fascia at specific distances from its insertion. The authors performed a standardized cadaveric dissection of 25 fresh frozen cadaveric specimens from a local region in Pennsylvania. Each fascial band width and thickness of the plantar fascia was measured at the fascial insertion, 2 cm distal from insertion, and 3 cm distal from insertion. The mean (± standard deviation) width of the medial, central, and lateral band of the plantar fascia 3 cm from its insertion was 25.3 ± 5.3, 25 ± 3.41, and 23.3 ± 4.49 mm, respectively. At the same anatomic distance, the band thicknesses were 1.5 ± 0.82, 3.3 ± 0.85, and 1.9 ± 0.33 mm, respectively. The literature describes 2 techniques. The first is transecting between one-third to two-thirds of the plantar fascia during a fasciotomy from medial to lateral. The second is identifying, isolating, and releasing the central band. Our study allows to further quantify this, equating to 24.5 to 49 mm in total medial to lateral transection at 3 cm distal from insertion and an isolated central band equating to 25 ± 3.41 mm. With quantitative measurements of transection length, the surgeon will avoid having to estimate and potentially overtransect. This may help in preventing postoperative sequela related to overcorrection.


Subject(s)
Fasciitis, Plantar , Fasciotomy , Aponeurosis/surgery , Cadaver , Fascia , Fasciitis, Plantar/surgery , Humans , Pennsylvania
2.
J Am Podiatr Med Assoc ; 109(2): 122-126, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31135201

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Increasing amounts of diabetes-focused content is being posted to YouTube with little regulation as to the quality of the content. Diabetic education has been shown to reduce the risk of ulceration and amputation. YouTube is a frequently visited site for instructional and demonstrational videos posted by individuals, advertisers, companies, and health-care organizations. We sought to evaluate the usefulness of diabetic foot care video information on YouTube. METHODS: YouTube was queried using the keyword phrase diabetic foot care. Original videos in English, with audio, less than 10 min long within the first 100 video results were evaluated. Two reviewers classified each video as useful or nonuseful/misleading. A 14-point usefulness criteria checklist was used to further categorize videos as most useful, somewhat useful, or nonuseful/misleading. Video sources were categorized by user type, and additional video metrics were collected. RESULTS: Of 87 included videos, 56 (64.4%), were classified as useful and 31 (35.6%) as nonuseful/misleading. A significant difference in the mean length of useful videos vs nonuseful/misleading videos was observed (3.33 versus 1.73 min; P < .0001). There was no significant difference in terms of popularity metrics (likes, views, subscriptions, etc) between useful and nonuseful/misleading videos. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that although most diabetic foot care videos on YouTube are useful, many are still nonuseful/misleading. More concerning is the lack of difference in popularity between useful and nonuseful videos. Podiatric physicians should alert patients to possibly misleading information and offer a curated list of videos.


Subject(s)
Consumer Health Information , Diabetic Foot/therapy , Patient Education as Topic , Self Care , Social Media , Humans
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