Interactive Transcript
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This is a 51-year-old complaining
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of Achilles pain for two weeks.
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So when I hear Achilles, the first thing
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I do is I pull down all my sagittals.
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So that's what we're going to do.
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Sagittal number one, sagittal number two.
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I think I've only got two.
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So let's pull down those first two.
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And I can usually figure out in the
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Achilles what's going on from just this.
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Now there is another interesting finding here.
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The patient's 51 and has
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somehow escaped into adulthood.
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with a fibrocartilaginous coalition.
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Why is this a coalition as opposed
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to just simply the Chopart joint?
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And the answer is it's too broad.
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In other words, the snout of the anterior
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process of the calcaneus normally is pointed.
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This one is rectangular.
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And then you see the cartilaginous interface
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between the anterior process and the navicular.
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Now, some of these patients, we don't
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have the resolution to tell, will have
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deficiency of the bifurcate ligament
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as part of a congenital abnormality.
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Those that have such a deficiency will often have
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More pronounced arthrosis of the Chopart joint.
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So by inference, the fact that there is so
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little arthritis of the Chopart joint, which
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is the talonavicular and calcaneal cuboid
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articulation tells you that you probably do
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not have displaces or absence of the ligaments.
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As you keep scrolling you see just
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how irregular though that coalition
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is there's some fragmentation.
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On the navicular side of the articulation.
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You also see a little swelling of the subtalar
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lateral sinus Tarsi with the extensive retinaculum
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and that is a side finding to the case.
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Now let's turn our attention.
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Back to the Achilles.
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So get out your pen.
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Let's go down the Achilles checklist.
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First question.
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Gender.
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It's a man.
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How do I ask that?
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But women wear high heels.
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They're more likely not exclusively, but
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they're more likely to have a pump bump or a
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Haglund deformity, which is found right here.
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Posterior superior.
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It looks like this,
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but a piece of bone.
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This patient doesn't have it.
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What if it was a man?
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In a man, in certain settings, I might
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consider something like reactive arthritis,
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formerly known as Reiter's syndrome.
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I might also consider gout.
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We had one last week, gouty
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infiltration of the Achilles tendon.
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So, that colors my judgment
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and my differential diagnosis.
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And I look at the age. This patient's 51.
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So I'm not thinking about,
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you know, congenital things.
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I'm thinking about acquired things.
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I'm thinking about overuse syndromes.
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And the next thing I do is I look
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at the shape of the calcaneus.
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I look for that pump bumper Haglund deformity.
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I check Kager's fat space.
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These are all part of my Achilles checklist.
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And there's a little bit of scarring there,
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nothing too dramatic in Kager's fat space.
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And then I look at the Achilles.
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I first start out up high, I look at the size of
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the muscles, I look at the myotendinous junction.
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And by the way, I do this very quickly,
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within a matter of 15 to 30 seconds.
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Then I work my way down and I look for focal
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architectural distortion of the fibers,
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which are normally parallel fibers that are
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hard to see unless the Achilles is inflamed.
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Okay.
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But they should run in parallel.
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There should be no focal high signal
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intensity defects, not even little ones.
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And I really don't see any defects so far.
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Now I do see something that is defect-like
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right here that's more focal, but when I look at
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the T1, it's got the signal intensity of bone.
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So I've got some heterotopic bone that
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is forming in the superficial Achilles.
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And the next thing I do is
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I look at the Achilles size.
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I'll allow the Achilles to be
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8 to 10 millimeters A to P.
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This one's well under 8 millimeters.
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Next on my checklist is the Supra Calcaneal Bursa.
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And this one has a tiny amount of fluid,
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nothing that I would even comment on.
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It's too small to even bother with.
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The next thing I do is I look
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at the footplate or footprint.
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This is the footprint of the Achilles.
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It has a high attachment, a mid
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attachment, and a low attachment.
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There's the low attachment right here.
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So you got to look all the way up and down and
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make sure that the Achilles is not delaminated.
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I look for concealed interstitial under surface
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delaminations, which would occur right here, here.
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here and they might or might not insert some
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insight, some periosteitis or marrow swelling.
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Now I don't have these little small
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under surface concealed tears, but I
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do have reactive bone marrow swelling
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right there on the water-weighted image.
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Hard to see on the T1, but it is there.
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It's real.
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It's not a coil artifact right there.
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So that is an indicator that
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the patient has periosteitis
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from traction from the Achilles.
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But if this was a man, and it is, I might
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also consider the diagnosis of reactive
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arthritis, formerly known as Reiter's syndrome.
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The next thing I do is I look at the
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peritenon, the outer covering of the Achilles.
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Now I can't see the peritenon, but I want
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to see fat circumscribing the Achilles.
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And I don't see that in this locus right here.
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Move it around a little bit.
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Not seeing good fat right there.
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Remember, that's where we saw that piece of bone.
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I look at the superficial aspect of the Achilles.
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So what do you call that?
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A superficial tear or fraying of
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the Achilles with heterotopic bone.
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Now, let's say there was a tear.
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Let's say there was a tear right here.
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I would tell the clinician in my report
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that the tear begins two centimeters
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above the superior calcaneal protuberance.
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The tear is two centimeters long.
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The tear is not full depth.
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And then I would go on to look at the
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axial and I would decide off the axial.
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What percent from side to side.
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If there were a tear here, let's say
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there was a tear that looked like this.
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I would say there's a 25 percent tear
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in the middle portion of the tendon.
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I would also give a depth.
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I would say less than 25, 25 to 50, or
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greater than 50 percent depth or full depth.
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And then I would also describe
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whether it has involvement of the
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lateral bundle or the medial bundle.
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That is pretty much the
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checklist for Achilles pathology.
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I don't use the coronal all that much.
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They did provide a heavily
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water-weighted coronal sequence.
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And sometimes you can see tears a
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little better here than on the other
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sequences, but most of the time not.
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And you can see that the Achilles itself,
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these wispy linear areas right here.
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They're not normal.
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They are a sign of intra-Achilles inflammation.
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They're parallel to one another.
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That's interstitial swelling between
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the tendon fibrils of the Achilles.
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So the diagnosis in this case would be
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Achilles tendinopathy, chronic, um, but active
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because of the swelling with heterotopic
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bone and a superficial fraying-type tear.
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Of the Achilles along its inferior footprint.
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That would be number one.
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Number two would be incidentally
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noted fibrocartilaginous coalition of
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the calcaneonavicular articulation.
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And if you wanted to, in the body, the
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report, you could throw in this, this
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chronic erosion that is seen in the cuboid.
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I do not use parallel pitch lines.
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Now I understand to diagnose Hagelin deformity.
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Here's what I do.
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I draw.
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I do use.
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I don't ever draw a line.
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I do very little measuring and drawing.
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I will draw a line straight across the
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calcaneus, the superior ridge of the calcaneus.
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And if the superior calcaneal protuberance
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projects more than 8 millimeters above that
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line, I will call it a Hagelin deformity.
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Again, I don't measure it.
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I usually just look.
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People that typically have a symptomatic
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Hagelin deformity will have swelling around it.
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