These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: The anatomy of a human foot with missing toes and reduplication of the hallux.
    Author: Hootnick DR, Packard DS, Levinsohn EM, Factor DA.
    Journal: J Anat; 1991 Feb; 174():1-17. PubMed ID: 2032928.
    Abstract:
    Detailed dissection of a malformed human foot was performed so that the skeletal and soft tissue anomalies in the foot could be compared and contrasted with those found in three previous specimens that we have dissected. The specimen described here consisted of a foot with a reduplicated hallux and two missing toes. Study of the bones revealed a wide medial metatarsal that articulated with a reduplicated hallux. There were two complete lateral toes with normal bones. Two toes and their metatarsals were missing with no remnants. The arterial pattern was similar to those seen previously by us. The dorsalis pedis artery was absent and the plantar arch was abnormal in that it did not terminate with a dorsal anastomosis. There was an extra lateral branch of the medial plantar artery. The digital arteries to the missing toes were also missing. The nerves of the foot were normal with the exception of an extra lateral branch from the medial plantar nerve. As with the arteries, the nerves to the missing toes were also missing. The muscles and tendons on the dorsal surface of the foot were all present but several of the tendons were inserted in abnormal locations in apparent response to the abnormal bone pattern. Most of the muscles and tendons of the plantar surface were present with the exception of the flexor hallucis longus and brevis muscles. Several of the remaining tendons apparently were influenced by the abnormal skeletal pattern and the missing muscles to become inserted on or near the replicated phalanges of the hallux. The anatomy of this specimen suggests that the teratogenic event occurred when specification of the limb bud mesoderm cells had progressed to the level of the distal tarsus and was located in the region that normally would have formed the metatarsals and phalanges of Toes 2 and 3. Further, we propose that the association between skeletal anomalies and arterial deficiencies has aetiological significance. We hypothesise that the abnormal arterial pattern put the limb at risk of teratogenic damage by reducing the number of collateral blood supply routes and that some event, such as extravasation of blood or embolisation, compromised the blood flow in the remaining blood vessels. These events could have resulted in both general shortening of the limb and the specific defects observed in this foot.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]