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The effect of osteotomy technique (flat-cut vs wedge-cut Weil) on pain relief and complication incidence following surgical treatment for metatarsalgia in a private metropolitan clinic: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
by
Ektas, Nalan
, Wines, Andrew
, Symes, Michael
, Fatima, Manaal
, Scholes, Corey
in
Australia
/ Biomedicine
/ Care and treatment
/ Clinical trials
/ Comparative analysis
/ Complication
/ Corporate sponsorship
/ Foot Diseases
/ Health aspects
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Incidence
/ Informed consent
/ Intervention
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Metatarsalgia
/ Metatarsalgia - etiology
/ Metatarsalgia - surgery
/ Metatarsus
/ Methods
/ Orthopedics
/ Osteotomy
/ Osteotomy - adverse effects
/ Osteotomy - methods
/ Pain
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Prospective Studies
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Study Protocol
/ Surgeons
/ Surgery
/ Tendons
/ Weil osteotomy
2022
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The effect of osteotomy technique (flat-cut vs wedge-cut Weil) on pain relief and complication incidence following surgical treatment for metatarsalgia in a private metropolitan clinic: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
by
Ektas, Nalan
, Wines, Andrew
, Symes, Michael
, Fatima, Manaal
, Scholes, Corey
in
Australia
/ Biomedicine
/ Care and treatment
/ Clinical trials
/ Comparative analysis
/ Complication
/ Corporate sponsorship
/ Foot Diseases
/ Health aspects
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Incidence
/ Informed consent
/ Intervention
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Metatarsalgia
/ Metatarsalgia - etiology
/ Metatarsalgia - surgery
/ Metatarsus
/ Methods
/ Orthopedics
/ Osteotomy
/ Osteotomy - adverse effects
/ Osteotomy - methods
/ Pain
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Prospective Studies
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Study Protocol
/ Surgeons
/ Surgery
/ Tendons
/ Weil osteotomy
2022
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The effect of osteotomy technique (flat-cut vs wedge-cut Weil) on pain relief and complication incidence following surgical treatment for metatarsalgia in a private metropolitan clinic: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
by
Ektas, Nalan
, Wines, Andrew
, Symes, Michael
, Fatima, Manaal
, Scholes, Corey
in
Australia
/ Biomedicine
/ Care and treatment
/ Clinical trials
/ Comparative analysis
/ Complication
/ Corporate sponsorship
/ Foot Diseases
/ Health aspects
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Incidence
/ Informed consent
/ Intervention
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Metatarsalgia
/ Metatarsalgia - etiology
/ Metatarsalgia - surgery
/ Metatarsus
/ Methods
/ Orthopedics
/ Osteotomy
/ Osteotomy - adverse effects
/ Osteotomy - methods
/ Pain
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Prospective Studies
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Study Protocol
/ Surgeons
/ Surgery
/ Tendons
/ Weil osteotomy
2022
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The effect of osteotomy technique (flat-cut vs wedge-cut Weil) on pain relief and complication incidence following surgical treatment for metatarsalgia in a private metropolitan clinic: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Journal Article
The effect of osteotomy technique (flat-cut vs wedge-cut Weil) on pain relief and complication incidence following surgical treatment for metatarsalgia in a private metropolitan clinic: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
2022
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Overview
Background
Weil osteotomies are performed to surgically treat metatarsalgia, by shortening the metatarsal via either a single distal oblique cut with translation of the metatarsal head (flat-cut) or through the removal of a slice of bone (wedge-cut). The wedge-cut technique purportedly has functional and mechanical advantages over the flat-cut procedure; however, in vivo data and quality of evidence are currently lacking. This study aims to investigate whether wedge-cut Weil osteotomy compared to traditional flat-cut Weil is associated with increased pain relief and fewer complications up to 12 months postoperatively.
Methods
Patient, surgical and clinical data will be collected for 80 consecutive consenting patients electing to undergo surgical treatment of propulsive metatarsalgia in a randomised control trial, embedded within a clinical registry. The primary outcome is patient-reported pain as assessed by the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) - Pain subscale, and the secondary outcome is the incidence of procedure-specific complications at up to 12 months postoperatively. The groups will be randomised using a central computer-based simple randomisation system, with a 1:1 allocation without blocking and allocation concealment. A mixed-effects analysis of covariance will be used to assess the primary outcome, with confounders factored into the model. A binary logistic regression will be used to assess the secondary outcome in a multivariable model containing the same confounders.
Discussion
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, the trial will be the first to examine the clinical efficacy of the wedge-cut Weil osteotomy compared to the flat-cut technique with a prospective, randomised control design.
Trial registration
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12620001251910. Registered on 23 November 2020.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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