# Anatomical Study of the Tibialis Posterior Tendon's Connections to the Plantar Muscles and Its Relationship With the Severity of Hallux Valgus

**Authors:** Turan Koç, Zeliha Kurtoğlu Olgunus, Fatih Çiçek, Alev Bobuş Örs

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/jfa2.70074 · 2025-08-13

## TL;DR

This study explores how connections between specific foot tendons relate to the severity of hallux valgus, a common foot deformity.

## Contribution

The study identifies a novel association between tibialis posterior tendon connections to plantar muscles and the severity of hallux valgus.

## Key findings

- Feet with connections between TP, FHB, and ADH tendons showed significantly larger hallux valgus angles.
- Tendon connections were present in 93.8% of feet with moderate-severe hallux valgus.
- Moderate-severe hallux valgus increased when TP was attached to ADH.

## Abstract

Changes in tendon morphometry around first‐row bones are linked to the hallux valgus (HV) development. However, there are very limited studies examining the relationship between the connection status of the tibialis posterior (TP) tendon to the adductor hallucis (ADH) and flexor hallucis brevis (FHB) tendons and the development of HV. This study aimed to investigate the association between these tendon connections and the occurrence of HV. The study included 24 formalin‐fixed adult cadavers and amputee feet (10 female, 14 male). The attachment sites and connections between the ADH, FHB, and TP tendons were recorded. Feet were classified into three groups: no connection between the three tendons (Group I), connection between TP and FHB (Group II), and connection between TP, FHB, and ADH (Group III). HV angle values and subgroups (normal, mild, and moderate‐severe) were defined to assess the degree of HV. Feet were grouped based on tendon attachment status, and the distribution of HV subgroups was statistically analyzed. HV angles in Group III were significantly larger than in Groups I and II (= 0.000, p = 0.024). While tendon connection was detected in only 20% (1/5) of feet without HV, tendon connection was detected in 64% (7/11) of mild HV and in all feet with moderate‐severe HV. HV occurred in 93.8% (15/16) of feet with tendon connections (vs. 50% without). The study revealed that HV can develop in feet with and without tendon attachments. However, HV is more frequent in cases where the TP tendon is attached to the FHB and ADH tendons. Additionally, moderate‐severe HV increases when TP is attached to ADH.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ALKBH1 (alkB homolog 1, histone H2A dioxygenase) [NCBI Gene 8846] {aka ABH, ABH1, ALKBH, alkB, hABH}, ADH1A (alcohol dehydrogenase 1A (class I), alpha polypeptide) [NCBI Gene 124] {aka ADH1}
- **Diseases:** joint deformity (MESH:D016916), muscle weakness (MESH:D018908), hypermobility (MESH:C536196), pes planus (MESH:D005413), TP (MESH:D037081), HV (MESH:D006215), subluxation of the first (MESH:D004204), deformity (MESH:D009140), foot deformities (MESH:D005530), muscle hypertrophy (MESH:C536106), joint (MESH:D007592)
- **Chemicals:** formalin (MESH:D005557), TP (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350190/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350190