Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders
= abnormal fibrous / cartilaginous / osseous fusion of two or more tarsal ossification bones
◊Clinically most important congenital problem of calcaneus
Prevalence: 12% of population
Cause: abnormal segmentation of primitive mesenchyme with lack of joint formation
Age: fibrous coalition at birth, ossification during 2nd decade of life with onset of symptoms; M÷F = 1÷1
- asymptomatic: often first noted after antecedent trauma / weight gain / increase in athletic activity
- peroneal spastic / rigid pes planus (= flatfoot) in adjustment for calcaneus valgus (= heel valgus)
- hindfoot / tarsal pain or stiffness
- both feet affected in 2050%
- osseous bars between bones of hindfoot / bones in close proximity with irregular surfaces
MR (of joint space):
- bone marrow contiguity (osseous coalition)
- fluid- / cartilage-intensity (cartilaginous coalition)
- intermediate- to low-signal intensity (fibrous coalition)
- reactive periarticular bone changes
- bone marrow edema along fused joint (STIR images)
Types:
- CALCANEONAVICULAR COALITION (45%)
Age: 812 years ← earlier ossification
- rigid flat foot ± pain in 2nd decade of life
Radiographs:
- narrowed calcaneonavicular joint with indistinct articular margins (bones that usually do not articulate)
- widening / flattening of anteromedial calcaneus
- anteater's nose = elongation of anterior dorsal calcaneus on lateral radiograph
- hypoplastic talar head
CT (axial scan):
- broadening of medial aspect of anterodorsal calcaneus in apposition to navicular
- narrowing of space between calcaneus and navicular + minimal marginal reactive sclerosis
Dx: mostly diagnosed on 45° internal oblique films - TALOCALCANEAL COALITION (45%)
Age: 1216 years
- painful peroneal spastic flat foot, relieved by rest
Site: middle facet at level of sustentaculum tali (most frequently)
Secondary radiographic signs ← alteration in hindfoot biomechanics:
- prominent talar beak (66%) arising from dorsal aspect of head / neck of talus ← impaired subtalar joint motion
- rounding of the lateral talar process
- narrowing of posterior subtalar joint
- lack of depiction of middle facets
- asymmetric anterior talocalcaneal joint
- ball-in-socket ankle mortise in severe cases
- C sign = C-shaped outline of the medial talar dome + posteroinferior sustentaculum on lateral radiograph (from bone bridge between talar dome + sustentaculum)
CT (coronal scan):
- bony bar bridging the middle facet of subtalar joint
- narrowed middle facet with reactive cystic + hypertrophic changes
- downward or horizontal slope of sustentaculum, instead of upward
Dx: requires cross-sectional imaging for diagnosis - TALONAVICULAR COALITION
- CALCANEOCUBOID COALITION
- CUBONAVICULAR COALITION
Rx: orthotics, casting, NSAID, steroid injections, physical therapy, resection, arthrodesis
DDx: acquired intertarsal ankylosis (infection, trauma, arthritis, surgery)