Evaluation of the ankle function after Achilles tendon resection: a retrospective clinical study
Olimpiu Bota, Leona M. Heinzinger, Bianka Herzog, Alexander C. Disch, Michael Amlang, Philipp Flößel, Adrian Dragu, Feras Taqatqeh

TL;DR
This study evaluates the ankle function and quality of life after complete Achilles tendon resection without reconstruction, finding satisfactory outcomes in elderly patients.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence on the long-term functional outcomes of Achilles tendon resection without reconstruction in elderly patients.
Findings
Patients showed a significant but acceptable loss of ankle flexion torque and range of motion after Achilles tendon resection.
There was a positive correlation between time since surgery and ankle joint strength recovery.
Functional scores indicated satisfactory leg function and gait despite tendon resection.
Abstract
The Achilles tendon is the strongest tendon in the human body and has the function of plantar ankle flexion. When the tendon is exposed, the peritendineum has been breached and the thick avascular tendon colonized with bacteria, a complete resection of the tendon may be indicated to achieve infection control and facilitate wound closure. The Achilles tendon reconstruction is not mandatory, as the plantar flexion of the ankle joint is assumed by the remaining flexor hallucis longus, flexor digitorum longus and tibialis posterior muscles. Our study aimed to evaluate the impact of Achilles tendon resection without reconstruction on leg function and quality of life. We retrospectively evaluated all patients who were treated with an Achilles tendon resection between January 2017 and June 2022 in our quaternary institution. After evaluating the data, the patients who survived and were not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTendon Structure and Treatment · Knee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Sports injuries and prevention
