Copyright
©The Author(s) 2017.
World J Orthop. May 18, 2017; 8(5): 364-371
Published online May 18, 2017. doi: 10.5312/wjo.v8.i5.364
Published online May 18, 2017. doi: 10.5312/wjo.v8.i5.364
Grade | Dorsiflexion | Radiographic findings | Clinical findings |
0 | 40° to 60° and/or 10% to 20% loss compared with normal side | Normal | No pain; only stiffness and loss of motion on examination |
1 | 30° to 40° and/or 20% to 50% loss compared with normal side | Dorsal osteophyte is main finding, minimal joint-space narrowing, minimal periarticular sclerosis, minimal flattening of metatarsal head | Mild or occasional pain and stiffness, pain at extremes of dorsiflexion and/or plantar flexion on examination |
2 | 10° to 30° and/or 50% to 75% loss compared with normal side | Dorsal, lateral, and possibly medial osteophytes giving flattened appearance to metatarsal head, no more than ¼ if dorsal joint space involved on lateral radiograph, mild-to-moderate joint-space narrowing and sclerosis, sesamoids not usually involved | Moderate-to-severe pain and stiffness that may be constant; pain occurs just before maximum dorsiflexion and maximum plantar flexion on examination |
3 | ≤ 10° and/or 75% to 100% loss compared with normal side. There is notable loss of metatarsophalangeal plantar flexion as well (often ≤ 10° of plantar flexion) | Same as in grade 2 but with substantial narrowing, possibly periarticular cystic changes, more than ¼ of dorsal joint space involved on lateral radiograph, sesamoids enlarged and/or cystic and/or irregular | Nearly constant pain and substantial stiffness at extremes of range of motion but not at mid-range |
4 | Same as in grade 3 | Same as in grade 3 | Same criteria as grade 3 but there is definite pain at mid-range of passive motion |
- Citation: Lam A, Chan JJ, Surace MF, Vulcano E. Hallux rigidus: How do I approach it? World J Orthop 2017; 8(5): 364-371
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2218-5836/full/v8/i5/364.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5312/wjo.v8.i5.364