# Diagnostic and Therapeutic Role of Peroneal Tenography in Chronic Peroneal Disorders: A Service Evaluation

**Authors:** Sandeep Munshi, Ranjith Nair, Rajiv Nair, Aditya Soni, Vaisakh Reghuram, Sivasankaran Munuswamy, Nadeem Baqai, Hariprasath Kanesan

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.81742 · 2025-04-05

## TL;DR

This study evaluates peroneal tenography as a diagnostic and therapeutic tool for chronic peroneal tendon disorders, finding it more effective than MRI in some cases.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that peroneal tenography is more accurate than MRI for diagnosing peroneal tendon disorders and can also provide therapeutic benefits.

## Key findings

- Peroneal tenography results matched intraoperative findings more often than MRI (p=0.033).
- 15 out of 27 patients experienced adequate pain relief after peroneal tenography.
- Peroneal tenography is more sensitive and specific than MRI for diagnosing peroneal tendon disorders.

## Abstract

Purpose

The aims were to investigate if there was a diagnostic difference between peroneal tenography and MRI to guide the management of peroneal tendon disorders with the secondary aim to investigate the therapeutic effect of peroneal tenography.

Methods

A retrospective study was carried out over a 75-month period, including all patients over 18 years who presented with ankle injuries to identify patients with peroneal tendon disorders. Symptomatic patients were investigated using MRI and peroneal tenography. This was also compared with intraoperative findings of peroneal tendons. Fischer's exact test was used to determine the diagnostic difference between peroneal tenography as compared to MRI. The therapeutic effect of peroneal tenography was also calculated.

Results

The cohort consisted of 27 patients (20 females and 7 males), with the median age being 50 years and the mean BMI being 31.9. The follow-up period after the final management plan was 12 months before discharge from care. Findings from peroneal tenography were more likely to match intraoperative findings than MRI when compared with intraoperative findings (p=0.033). Fifteen out of the 27 patients who underwent peroneal tenography reported adequate pain relief following the procedure.

Conclusion

Peroneal tenography is more sensitive and specific in determining peroneal tendon disorders as compared to MRI and plays a role as a therapeutic intervention in ankle pain management for these patients.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** peroneal tendon disorders (MESH:D052256), ankle pain (MESH:D010146), Peroneal Disorders (MESH:D020427), ankle injuries (MESH:D016512)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12051077/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12051077