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Author Notes:

Gabriel Santamarina DPM, AACFAS, Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine and Department of Orthopedics, Emory University School of Medicine, USA; Phone: 3057768047

Subjects:

Considerations in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Morton’s Entrapment: A Review

Tools:

Journal Title:

Integrative Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology

Volume:

Volume 3, Number 3

Publisher:

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Intermetatarsal neuromas, known by their eponym as Morton’s neuromas, are a common painful forefoot pathology seen in the foot and ankle clinic. The nomenclature of this condition is misleading. The term “neuroma” refers to a non-degenerative nerve injury. The condition clinicians most often describe in a “Morton’s neuroma” is more accurately described as a perineural fibrosis of the plantar interdigital nerve leading to entrapment of this nerve [1]. Surgical treatment varies from entrapment release to full neurectomy [2]. Post-operative pathology review of neurectomized tissue rarely demonstrates axonal degeneration and collagen proliferation [3]. Those changes are the pathophysiological markers associated with nerve injury that lead to true neuroma formation. The authors, therefore, recommend changing the common name of the condition from “intermetatarsal neuroma” to interdigital nerve entrapment to better define the disease. The aim of this review is to present treatment schemes seen in “Morton’s” diagnosis, and to suggest an algorithm which may improve patient outcome.

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