# Ultrasound- and Colour Doppler-Guided WALANT Surgery for Insertional Achilles Tendinopathy: A Prospective Case Series on 53 Consecutive Patients

**Authors:** Philip Bazala, Markus Waldén, David Roberts, Christoph Spang, Håkan Alfredson

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jfmk11010034 · Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

A new ultrasound-guided surgery method for treating chronic Achilles tendon pain shows high patient satisfaction and improved function after three years.

## Contribution

Introduces a novel US- and CD-guided WALANT surgical approach for insertional Achilles tendinopathy with promising clinical outcomes.

## Key findings

- Patients showed high satisfaction rates with the new surgical approach.
- VISA-A scores improved significantly from pre-operative 41.9 to post-operative 87.7.
- Low complication rates were observed with three surgical complications among 53 cases.

## Abstract

Background: Treatment of chronic painful insertional Achilles tendinopathy is known to be challenging. If non-surgical treatment does not give sufficient relief of symptoms, surgery may be indicated. Treatment with ultrasound (US)- and colour Doppler (CD)-guided wide-awake-local-anaesthetic-no-tourniquet (WALANT) surgery for insertional Achilles tendinopathy is a new approach with promising clinical results. This study aimed to evaluate clinical results of this new approach on patients suffering from insertional Achilles tendinopathy. Methods: Forty-eight consecutive patients with 53 symptomatic tendons (33 men with 34 tendons, mean age 49.3 ± 12.0 years; 14 women with 18 tendons, mean age 55.0 ± 7.4 years) and a duration of more than 12 months with painful insertional Achilles tendinopathy (including tendon, bursae, bone, and plantaris pathology) were included. US- and CD-guided WALANT surgery with removal of pathological bursae, bone, and tendons was used. Immediate weight-bearing loading was allowed, followed by a structured rehabilitation protocol for the first 12 weeks after surgery. VISA-A scores before and after surgery and a questionnaire that evaluated subjective satisfaction with the treatment and current activity level were used. Results: In total, 42/48 patients with 46/53 tendons participated in a 3-year follow-up (mean 34 ± 9 months) by an independent examiner; 39/42 patients with 43/46 tendons were satisfied (n = 37) with the treatment. The mean VISA-A score increased significantly from 41.9 ± 18.2 pre-operatively to 87.7 ± 18.2 post-operatively (p < 0.001). There were three surgical complications, two superficial wound infections, and one minor wound rupture. Conclusions: Patients who suffered from chronic painful insertional Achilles tendinopathy treated with US- and CD-guided WALANT surgery followed by immediate weight-bearing showed high patient subjective satisfaction rates and better functional scores at the 3-year follow-up with a low complication rate. This novel treatment approach warrants more study, including randomised trials comparing it against traditional surgical procedures according to Nunley and Keck and Kelly.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** rupture (MESH:D012421), Achilles Tendinopathy (MESH:D052256), wound infections (MESH:D014946)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12821457/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12821457