Corrigendum to “Comparison of baseline outcomes between surgical and nonoperative management in youth with lower extremity torsional abnormalities” [J Orthopedics 73 (2026) 227–233]
M. Gagnon, J.P. Bauer, K.M. Kruger, S. Tavukcu, H. Altiok, R. Hamdy, M. Bernstein, L.N. Veilleux

TL;DR
The study compares surgical and nonoperative treatments for lower extremity torsional abnormalities in youth, finding modest differences with more patellofemoral instability in the surgical group.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence comparing clinical outcomes of surgical and nonoperative treatments for torsional abnormalities in youth.
Findings
Surgical patients showed more signs of patellofemoral instability compared to nonoperative patients.
Nonoperative patients reported lower knee function in daily living and sports activities compared to controls.
Both treatment groups differed from controls in multiple measures, suggesting treatment is beneficial regardless of approach.
Abstract
Lower extremity torsional abnormalities (LETA) include excessive femoral and/or tibial torsion and can be associated with pain, functional limitations and patellofemoral instability. This study examined whether clinical differences exist between surgically and nonoperatively managed patients. Patients aged 10-21 years with LETA referred for nonoperative or surgical treatment underwent imaging, physical assessment (range of motion (ROM), handheld dynamometry, patellofemoral tests), gait analysis and patient-reported outcomes (PROs: PODCI, FAQ, PEDI-IKDC, APPT, Cosmetic ratings, PROMIS, HAGOS). A control group of typically developing participants underwent the same assessments except imaging. Groups were compared using ANOVA/Kruskal-Wallis test, and statistical parametric mapping. Thirty-four patients (surgery n = 21, 16.3 ± 2.3 years; nonoperative n = 13, 14.7 ± 2.0 years) and 21…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHip disorders and treatments · Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies · Knee injuries and reconstruction techniques
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