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© 2026 OrthoVellum. For educational purposes only.

Not affiliated with the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons.

Peroneal Tendon Disorders

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Peroneal Tendon Disorders

Comprehensive guide to peroneal tendon pathology including tears, subluxation, and SPR repair - covering anatomy, classification, surgical techniques, and rehabilitation

complete
Updated: 2026-01-02
High Yield Overview

PERONEAL TENDON DISORDERS

Lateral Ankle Pain | Subluxation and Tears | SPR Repair | Tenodesis

77%longitudinal split tears
38%subluxation rate in athletes
11%associated with ankle fractures
90%good outcomes with early repair

PERONEUS BREVIS TEARS CLASSIFICATION

Grade 1
PatternLess than 50% tendon width
TreatmentDebridement
Grade 2
Pattern50-100% width, repairable
TreatmentPrimary repair
Grade 3
PatternIrreparable, severe degeneration
TreatmentTenodesis to longus

Critical Must-Knows

  • Peroneus brevis most commonly torn - lies anterior, compressed against fibula
  • Superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) injury causes subluxation - attach fibular groove rim
  • Low-lying peroneus brevis muscle belly anatomical variant increases tear risk
  • MRI gold standard - demonstrates split tears, subluxation, muscle edema patterns
  • Acute SPR repair superior to delayed - 90% vs 60% return to sport

Examiner's Pearls

  • "
    Peroneal subluxation tests: Passive dorsiflexion-eversion with active resistance - feel snap
  • "
    Split tears: Linear high signal on MRI, 'comma sign' on axial imaging (retracted tendon)
  • "
    Oden classification for subluxation guides SPR repair vs groove deepening vs both
  • "
    Tenodesis indication: Over 50% tendon loss, severe degeneration, failed primary repair

Clinical Imaging

Imaging Gallery

2-panel (A-B) peroneus brevis split tear with MRI-surgical correlation: (A) axial T2 fat-sat MRI showing split tear and enlarged peroneus brevis (white arrow) with increased synovial fluid, (B) intrao
Click to expand
2-panel (A-B) peroneus brevis split tear with MRI-surgical correlation: (A) axial T2 fat-sat MRI showing split tear and enlarged peroneus brevis (whitCredit: Park HJ et al. - Clin Orthop Surg via Open-i (NIH) - PMC2981781 (CC-BY 4.0)
2-panel (A-B) chevron-shaped split tear of peroneus brevis: (A) axial T2 fat-sat MRI showing characteristic chevron or boomerang shape of split tendon wrapped around peroneus longus (white arrows), (B
Click to expand
2-panel (A-B) chevron-shaped split tear of peroneus brevis: (A) axial T2 fat-sat MRI showing characteristic chevron or boomerang shape of split tendonCredit: Park HJ et al. - Clin Orthop Surg via Open-i (NIH) - PMC2981781 (CC-BY 4.0)
Axial T1 MRI showing normal peroneus longus and brevis tendons distal to lateral malleolus - both tendons appear as tubular low-signal structures (black arrow) with normal morphology for comparison.
Click to expand
Axial T1 MRI showing normal peroneus longus and brevis tendons distal to lateral malleolus - both tendons appear as tubular low-signal structures (blaCredit: Park HJ et al. - Clin Orthop Surg via Open-i (NIH) - PMC2981781 (CC-BY 4.0)

Critical Peroneal Tendon Exam Points

Anatomy Distinction

Peroneus brevis lies anterior. Inserts 5th metatarsal base. More commonly torn (compressed against fibular groove). Peroneus longus posterior, travels under foot to 1st metatarsal/medial cuneiform. Subluxation affects both but brevis tear dominates.

SPR Anatomy

Superior peroneal retinaculum attaches from lateral fibular ridge to lateral calcaneus. Width 1-2cm, just posterior to lateral malleolus. Injury mechanism: forced dorsiflexion-eversion, avulsion from fibula. Oden Types I-IV guide repair strategy.

Surgical Indications

Acute SPR repair: within 6 weeks, active patients. Chronic subluxation: failed conservative, recurrent snapping, sports. Tendon repair: over 50% width tear, grade 2-3. Tenodesis: irreparable brevis, over 50% tendon loss.

Critical Timing

Acute SPR repair: Operate within 6 weeks - 90% return to sport vs 60% delayed. Split tear debridement: Early intervention prevents propagation. Postop protocol: NWB 4 weeks in equinus cast, protect repair healing before loading.

Quick Decision Guide - Peroneal Pathology

Clinical ScenarioPathologyTreatmentKey Pearl
Acute subluxation, sports injury, under 6 weeksOden Type I SPR avulsionOpen SPR repair to fibulaEarly repair critical - 90% return to sport
Chronic subluxation, shallow groove, failed conservativeOden Type II-III, groove pathologySPR repair + groove deepeningCombined procedure for anatomical deficiency
Lateral ankle pain, MRI shows longitudinal split under 50%Grade 1 peroneus brevis tearDebridement, synovectomyConservative if minimal - PT for 3 months first
Lateral ankle pain, MRI shows over 50% tendon width tearGrade 2-3 peroneus brevis tearTubularization repair or tenodesisTenodesis if over 50% loss or severe degeneration
Mnemonic

BALFPeroneal Tendon Anatomy

B
Brevis is Anterior
Lies anterior in fibular groove, compressed against bone - more tears
A
At 5th metatarsal base
Peroneus brevis insertion site - avulsion fractures occur here
L
Longus travels Long way
Posterior tendon, travels under foot to 1st metatarsal/medial cuneiform
F
Fibular groove posterior
Posterior to lateral malleolus, SPR prevents subluxation

Memory Hook:BALF - Brevis At front, Longus Further back in the fibular groove!

Mnemonic

FAGSSuperior Peroneal Retinaculum (SPR) Injury Classification - Oden

F
Fibular avulsion (Type I)
SPR avulsed from fibular insertion - most common acute injury
A
Attenuated SPR (Type II)
Stretched but intact SPR, often with shallow groove
G
Groove deficiency (Type III)
Shallow or convex fibular groove, SPR intact but insufficient
S
Scarred/healed (Type IV)
Chronic healed SPR injury with persistent subluxation

Memory Hook:FAGS classification - From acute avulsion to chronic scarred states, guides surgical approach!

Mnemonic

DRGTSurgical Treatment Options for Peroneal Disorders

D
Debridement
Grade 1 tears under 50% - remove degenerative tissue, synovectomy
R
Repair (tubularization)
Grade 2 tears - side-to-side suture, restore tubular contour
G
Groove deepening
Shallow groove - remove 2-3mm cortical bone, preserve lateral ridge for SPR
T
Tenodesis
Grade 3 irreparable - brevis to longus tenodesis, sacrifice function

Memory Hook:DRGT - Debride, Repair, Groove, Tenodesis - escalating surgical intervention ladder!

Overview and Epidemiology

Why Peroneal Disorders Matter

Peroneal tendon pathology is underdiagnosed - often attributed to chronic lateral ankle pain or recurrent sprains. Peroneus brevis splits occur in over three-quarters of symptomatic cases due to compression in the fibular groove. Superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) injuries cause painful subluxation, particularly in athletes during cutting sports. Early recognition and surgical intervention within 6 weeks for acute injuries achieves superior outcomes compared to chronic management.

Demographics

  • Age: 20-40 years most common for acute tears and subluxation
  • Gender: Male athletes higher risk for SPR injury (forced eversion)
  • Sports: Basketball, soccer, skiing - forced dorsiflexion-eversion
  • Chronic: Over 40 years - degenerative splits, low-lying muscle belly variant

Clinical Impact

  • Lateral ankle pain - often misdiagnosed as ankle sprain or ATFL injury
  • Functional limitation - difficulty with lateral push-off, cutting sports
  • Recurrent subluxation - painful snapping, instability sensation
  • Progression - untreated splits propagate, tendon degeneration accelerates

High-Risk Anatomical Variants

Low-lying peroneus brevis muscle belly extends into the fibular groove (15-20% population) - increases compression, doubles tear risk. Shallow fibular groove (Oden Type III) predisposes to subluxation even with intact SPR. Peroneal tubercle hypertrophy on lateral calcaneus can cause chronic friction and splitting. Identify these on MRI preoperatively to guide surgical planning.

Pathophysiology and Anatomy

Fibular Groove Anatomy - Critical to Understand Pathology

The retrofibular groove is a concave depression on the posterior lateral malleolus, approximately 1cm wide and 2-3mm deep. Peroneus brevis lies anterior within this groove, directly against bone, while peroneus longus is posterior. The groove acts as a pulley during ankle dorsiflexion-plantarflexion and eversion. Compression of brevis against the fibula during eversion generates shear forces that cause longitudinal splitting. The superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) originates from the lateral fibular ridge (Wagstaffe tubercle area) and inserts on the lateral calcaneus, spanning the tendons to prevent anterior subluxation.

Peroneal Tendon Anatomy Comparison

FeaturePeroneus BrevisPeroneus Longus
Position in grooveAnterior - against fibulaPosterior - against brevis
Insertion5th metatarsal base (dorsal)1st metatarsal base, medial cuneiform (plantar)
FunctionAnkle eversion, plantarflexionAnkle eversion, 1st ray plantarflexion, arch support
Tear frequency77% of peroneal tears23% of peroneal tears
Mechanism of tearCompression in groove, shearUsually associated brevis tear or trauma

Superior Peroneal Retinaculum (SPR)

  • Origin: Lateral fibular ridge (Wagstaffe tubercle), 1-2cm wide band
  • Insertion: Lateral calcaneus, just posterior to malleolus
  • Function: Prevents anterior subluxation during eversion, stabilizes tendons
  • Blood supply: Branches from peroneal artery - repair preserves vascularity
  • Injury: Avulsion from fibula (Type I), stretch (Type II), chronic attenuation (Type IV)

Fibular Groove Variants

  • Normal: Concave, 2-3mm depth, smooth cortical surface
  • Shallow: Under 2mm depth (Oden Type III) - predisposes to subluxation
  • Convex: Outward bulge - pathological, requires groove deepening
  • Irregular: Post-fracture, hypertrophic spurring - friction source
  • Widened: Chronic subluxation stretches groove, retinaculum incompetent

Biomechanics of Peroneal Tendon Pathology

Compression mechanism: During ankle eversion, peroneus brevis is compressed between the fibula and peroneus longus. The anterior position of brevis within the groove concentrates shear stress on its posterior surface, leading to longitudinal splitting that propagates proximally and distally.

Low-lying muscle belly variant: When the muscle belly extends into the fibular groove (15-20% prevalence), the increased tissue bulk within the constrained space further elevates compression forces during ankle motion, accelerating degenerative changes.

Subluxation mechanism: With SPR insufficiency (avulsion or attenuation), dorsiflexion-eversion causes the tendons to subluxate anteriorly over the lateral malleolus. The snapping sensation represents reduction back into the groove with plantarflexion. Chronic subluxation causes SPR stretching and groove rim wear.

Classification Systems

Peroneus Brevis Tear Grading

GradeTear ExtentTendon IntegrityTreatmentPrognosis
Grade 1Less than 50% widthMajority intact, functionalDebridement, synovectomyExcellent - 90% return to sport
Grade 250-100% width, repairableCompromised but reparableTubularization, side-to-side repairGood - 80% return to sport with PT
Grade 3Over 50% tendon substance lossSevere degeneration, irreparableTenodesis to longus, allograftFair - 60% return, accept function loss

Grading Determination Intraoperatively

The 50% threshold is critical. Tears involving less than 50% of tendon width can be debrided and retain sufficient strength for function. Tears over 50% require tubularization repair to restore mechanical strength. Grade 3 with over 50% substance loss (not just split width but actual tendon tissue gone) necessitates tenodesis because repair under tension will fail. Assess intraoperatively - MRI often underestimates extent.

Oden Classification for Peroneal Subluxation

TypePathologySPR StatusGroove AnatomySurgical Strategy
Type IAcute SPR avulsion from fibulaTorn, good tissue qualityNormal groove depthPrimary SPR repair to fibula with suture anchors
Type IISPR attenuated but intactStretched, thin, incompetentNormal or mildly shallowSPR imbrication or reconstruction
Type IIIShallow or convex fibular grooveMay be intact or tornLess than 2mm depth, pathologicalGroove deepening + SPR repair
Type IVChronic healed SPR injuryScarred, thickened, incompetentOften widened groove from chronic subluxationSPR reconstruction + consider groove deepening

Combined Pathology Common in Chronic Cases

Many chronic subluxation cases are mixed Oden types - for example, Type I acute injury heals poorly (Type IV) with subsequent groove widening from chronic subluxation (Type III anatomy develops). Surgical planning must address all components: SPR incompetence, groove anatomy, and any associated peroneus brevis tear. MRI and intraoperative inspection guide decision-making.

Clinical Assessment

History - Key Features

  • Pain location: Lateral ankle, posterior to malleolus, aggravated by activity
  • Mechanism: Forced dorsiflexion-eversion (acute SPR tear), insidious onset (chronic split)
  • Snapping sensation: Palpable or audible snap with ankle motion (subluxation)
  • Functional limitation: Difficulty with lateral push-off, cutting, running
  • Chronic ankle sprains: Recurrent lateral ankle pain, attributed to ligamentous injury
  • Prior treatment: Failed conservative management, ankle bracing ineffective

Examination - Specific Tests

  • Inspection: Swelling posterior to lateral malleolus, asymmetry vs contralateral
  • Palpation: Tenderness along peroneal tendons, fibular groove, SPR insertion
  • Peroneal subluxation test: Passive dorsiflexion-eversion with active resistance - feel snap
  • Resisted eversion: Pain with resisted eversion suggests tendon pathology
  • Circumduction test: Ankle circumduction reproduces snapping or pain
  • Neurovascular: Common peroneal nerve function (dorsiflexion, EHL), pulses intact

Beware the Occult Peroneal Tear

Chronic lateral ankle pain in the absence of acute injury or obvious instability may represent peroneal tendon pathology. Misdiagnosis as chronic ankle sprain is common, leading to failed conservative treatment. Consider peroneal pathology when:

  • Lateral ankle pain posterior to malleolus (not anterior ATFL distribution)
  • Failed physiotherapy for presumed sprain over 3 months
  • Snapping sensation or audible pop with ankle motion
  • Tenderness directly over fibular groove or peroneal tendons MRI is gold standard to confirm diagnosis and avoid delayed treatment.

Physical Examination Maneuvers

Peroneal Subluxation Test (Specificity 90%):

  1. Patient seated, ankle relaxed in neutral position
  2. Examiner passively dorsiflexes and everts ankle
  3. Patient actively resists eversion while maintaining dorsiflexion
  4. Positive test: Palpable or visible snap as tendons subluxate anteriorly over lateral malleolus
  5. Tendons reduce with plantarflexion - audible or palpable clunk

Circumduction Test:

  • Passively circumduct the ankle through full ROM
  • Positive: Pain or snapping at specific arc (usually dorsiflexion-eversion)
  • Reproduces patient's symptoms

Resisted Eversion Strength:

  • Compare to contralateral side
  • Weakness suggests significant tendon pathology (over 50% tear or chronic degeneration)
  • Pain without weakness: minor tear or tendinopathy

Investigations

Imaging Protocol for Peroneal Pathology

First LinePlain Radiographs

Views: AP, lateral, mortise ankle. Oblique foot if 5th metatarsal base pain. Look for:

  • Fibular groove abnormalities (shallow, convex, spurs)
  • Os peroneum fragmentation (peroneus longus injury)
  • 5th metatarsal base avulsion (brevis insertion injury)
  • Ankle fracture (11% association with peroneal injury)
  • Lateral calcaneal spurring (chronic friction)

Sensitivity: Low for soft tissue pathology, but essential baseline.

Gold StandardMRI Ankle

Protocol: Axial, sagittal, coronal sequences. T1, T2, STIR. Fat-suppressed imaging critical. Key findings:

  • Longitudinal split: Linear high signal within tendon on all sequences
  • Comma sign: Axial view shows retracted split tendon edge (pathognomonic)
  • Low-lying muscle belly: Muscle extending into fibular groove
  • SPR injury: Discontinuity, edema, avulsion from fibula
  • Subluxation: Tendons anterior to lateral malleolus on axial view
  • Tendinosis: Increased T2 signal, tendon thickening, peritendinous edema

Sensitivity/Specificity: 90% for tears, 80% for subluxation (dynamic component missed).

Dynamic AssessmentUltrasound

Advantage: Real-time dynamic evaluation during ankle motion - can visualize subluxation. Findings: Hypoechoic split, tendon thickening, subluxation during dorsiflexion-eversion. Limitation: Operator-dependent, less detailed than MRI for intrasubstance tears. Use case: When MRI unavailable or confirms dynamic subluxation clinically suspected.

Rarely NeededCT Scan

Indication: Preoperative planning for fibular groove anatomy in Oden Type III. Advantage: Precise bony anatomy, groove depth measurement, surgical planning. Limitation: No soft tissue detail - does not show tendon or SPR pathology.

MRI Interpretation Pearls

Comma sign on axial MRI: The retracted edge of a longitudinal split peroneus brevis creates a C-shaped or comma appearance - highly specific for split tear. Low-lying muscle belly: Look for muscle signal extending into the fibular groove on axial images - this predicts increased risk of recurrent tearing even after repair. SPR avulsion: Focal high T2 signal at fibular insertion site with discontinuity - indicates acute injury suitable for primary repair. Tendinosis vs tear: Diffuse high T2 signal without discrete linear split suggests tendinopathy - may respond to conservative treatment.

Management Algorithm

📊 Management Algorithm
peroneal tendon disorders management algorithm
Click to expand
Management algorithm for peroneal tendon disordersCredit: OrthoVellum

Non-Operative Treatment Indications

Appropriate for:

  • Grade 1 tears (under 50% width) in low-demand patients
  • Mild subluxation without mechanical symptoms (snapping tolerable)
  • Tendinopathy without discrete tear
  • First-line for all patients without acute SPR avulsion

Conservative Protocol - 3 Month Trial

Weeks 0-2Acute Phase

Goals: Reduce inflammation, protect tendons from further injury.

  • Immobilization: CAM boot or ankle brace, limit eversion activity
  • Ice: 15-20 minutes TDS, reduce acute edema
  • NSAIDs: Consider short course (2 weeks) if no contraindications
  • Activity modification: Avoid cutting sports, lateral movements
Weeks 2-8Rehabilitation Phase

Goals: Restore strength, proprioception, gradual return to function.

  • Physiotherapy: Eccentric peroneal strengthening, balance training
  • Ankle mobilization: Restore dorsiflexion ROM without eversion stress
  • Proprioception: Single-leg balance, wobble board, sport-specific drills
  • Taping: Athletic taping or bracing for sport if tolerated
Weeks 8-12Return to Sport

Criteria: Pain-free ADLs, full strength vs contralateral, no subluxation symptoms.

  • Gradual progression: Walk → jog → run → cutting → full sport
  • Bracing: External ankle support may be needed long-term
  • Re-evaluation: If symptoms persist at 12 weeks, consider MRI and surgical consultation

When Conservative Treatment Fails

Indications for surgical referral:

  • Persistent pain or subluxation after 3 months conservative treatment
  • Recurrent subluxation causing mechanical symptoms or activity limitation
  • Progressive tendon degeneration on repeat MRI
  • Acute SPR avulsion in active patients (surgical window 6 weeks)
  • Grade 2-3 tears with functional impairment

Do not delay surgery in acute SPR injuries - outcomes deteriorate significantly after 6 weeks.

Indications for Operative Management

Surgical Decision Matrix

PathologyPatient FactorsTimingProcedure
Acute SPR avulsion (Oden I)Active, sports participationWithin 6 weeks of injuryOpen SPR repair to fibula with suture anchors
Chronic subluxation, shallow grooveFailed conservative 3 monthsElective timingSPR repair or reconstruction + groove deepening
Peroneus brevis tear Grade 2-3Functional impairment, painAfter failed conservative or acute over 50%Debridement, repair, or tenodesis depending on extent
Combined SPR injury + tendon tearYoung athlete, high demandOptimize timing for sport seasonAddress both pathologies - SPR repair + tendon surgery

Absolute Indications

  • Acute SPR avulsion in active patients within 6 weeks
  • Recurrent subluxation causing mechanical symptoms, functional limitation
  • Peroneus brevis tear over 50% width with pain or weakness
  • Failed conservative management after 3 months structured physiotherapy
  • Progressive symptoms despite treatment, MRI showing worsening pathology

Relative Indications

  • Chronic subluxation with minimal symptoms but concern for future degeneration
  • Low-lying muscle belly with recurrent tendinosis despite conservative treatment
  • Oden Type III (shallow groove) even if mild symptoms - anatomical predisposition
  • Occupational demands - manual workers, military, requiring lateral ankle stability

Timing Is Critical for SPR Repair

Acute SPR repair within 6 weeks: 90% return to sport, good tissue quality for primary repair. Delayed repair after 6 weeks: 60% return to sport, tissue retraction and scarring make primary repair difficult, often requires reconstruction or augmentation. Chronic subluxation over 6 months: SPR reconstruction (tendon graft or local tissue transfer) often needed, combined with groove deepening if Type III anatomy present. Aim to operate acutely whenever possible in active patients.

Surgical Technique

Patient Positioning and Setup

Positioning Checklist

Step 1Position

Supine or lateral decubitus (surgeon preference). Ipsilateral hip bump for supine to internally rotate leg.

  • Head: Secured on donut, neutral cervical spine
  • Torso: Flat on table, bump under ipsilateral hip (10-15 degrees rotation)
  • Contralateral leg: Flat, secured with leg holder or tape
  • Operative leg: Free draped from tourniquet to toes
Step 2Tourniquet and Prep
  • Tourniquet: High thigh, well-padded, inflated to 250-300mmHg (or LOP + 100)
  • Exsanguination: Elevate limb 2 minutes, Esmarch bandage from toes to tourniquet
  • Prep: Betadine or chlorhexidine, toes to mid-calf, allow dry time
  • Drape: Free drape foot and ankle, exclude toes (but keep visible for positioning checks)
Step 3Equipment Check
  • Implants: 2-3 suture anchors (3.0-3.5mm) for SPR repair, have extras
  • Suture: 2-0 FiberWire or Ethibond for tendon repair, 0 or 1 for SPR
  • Instruments: Small joint set, periosteal elevator, bone rongeur for groove deepening
  • Power: Sagittal saw or burr for groove deepening (if planned)
  • C-arm: Not typically needed, but available if fracture fixation required

Surgical Approach - Lateral Ankle

Lateral Approach to Peroneal Tendons

Step 1Skin Incision

Landmarks: Posterior border of fibula, from 6cm proximal to tip of lateral malleolus to 3cm distal. Length: 8-10cm curvilinear incision, following posterior fibular border. Orientation: Slightly curved posteriorly to avoid sural nerve anteriorly. Technique: Sharply through skin and subcutaneous tissue with knife, preserve cutaneous nerves.

Step 2Identify and Protect Sural Nerve

Critical step: Sural nerve runs with short saphenous vein in subcutaneous tissue, anterior to incision.

  • Location: Typically 1-2cm anterior to posterior fibular border
  • Identify: Look for nerve-vessel bundle in subcutaneous fat after skin incision
  • Protect: Retract anteriorly with skin flap, avoid traction injury

Sural Nerve Injury

Sural nerve injury causes lateral foot numbness and painful neuroma. Incidence 5-10% in lateral ankle surgery. Prevention: Keep incision posterior along fibular border, gentle handling of nerve when identified, avoid traction on anterior skin flap. If nerve injured, consider primary repair with microsurgical technique or bury nerve end in muscle to prevent neuroma.

Step 3Superficial Fascia Incision

Layer: Superficial peroneal fascia overlying tendons, just deep to subcutaneous fat. Technique: Longitudinal incision over palpable tendons, parallel to skin incision. Identify: Superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) as thickened band at level of lateral malleolus. Preserve: SPR initially - do not divide until pathology assessed.

Step 4Expose Peroneal Tendons

Incise SPR: Longitudinal incision through SPR, directly over tendons (will repair later). Open sheath: Continue incision proximally and distally to fully expose tendon sheath. Synovectomy: Remove inflamed synovium to visualize tendons clearly. Identify pathology: Inspect both peroneus brevis (anterior) and longus (posterior) for tears, subluxation, low-lying muscle belly.

Avoid the Sural Nerve

The sural nerve is the most at-risk structure in lateral ankle surgery. It runs 1-2cm anterior to the posterior fibular border, within the subcutaneous fat. Prevention strategy: Make skin incision directly over posterior fibular border or slightly posterior, identify nerve early in dissection, retract anteriorly with skin flap. If injured: Consider primary repair if sharp transection, or bury nerve end in peroneus brevis muscle to prevent symptomatic neuroma.

Tendon Debridement and Repair Techniques

Peroneus Brevis Tear Management

Step 1Assess Tear Extent

Inspection: Visualize entire tendon from muscle-tendon junction to insertion on 5th metatarsal.

  • Longitudinal split: Most common - linear tear along posterior surface (against fibula)
  • Degenerative tissue: Frayed edges, discolored, loss of normal shiny appearance
  • Measure: Estimate percentage of tendon width involved (under 50%, 50-100%, or substance loss) Grading: Classify as Grade 1 (under 50%), Grade 2 (50-100% repairable), Grade 3 (over 50% loss).
Step 2Grade 1 - Debridement

Indication: Less than 50% tendon width involved, majority of tendon intact. Technique:

  • Longitudinal incision along split edges with knife
  • Excise degenerative tissue with rongeur or scissors
  • Leave healthy tendon edges, smooth contour
  • Synovectomy - remove all inflamed synovial tissue No repair needed - remaining tendon (over 50%) sufficient for function. Outcome: Excellent - 90% return to sport, pain resolution.
Step 3Grade 2 - Tubularization Repair

Indication: 50-100% tendon width split, but tendon substance present (not lost). Technique - Side-to-Side Repair:

  • Debride split edges to healthy tissue (minimal excision)
  • Place 2-0 FiberWire or Ethibond sutures in side-to-side fashion
  • Use running or interrupted sutures to close split longitudinally
  • Goal: Restore tubular tendon contour, appose split edges under minimal tension
  • Check: Ankle ROM should not gap repair - if gaps, consider tenodesis instead Suture technique: Krackow or running locking stitch, 4-6 throws along split length. Outcome: Good - 80% return to sport with proper rehabilitation.
Step 4Grade 3 - Tenodesis

Indication: Over 50% tendon substance loss, severe degeneration, repair under tension. Technique - Brevis to Longus Tenodesis:

  • Excise irreparable brevis tendon, preserve insertion on 5th metatarsal if intact
  • Identify peroneus longus tendon (posterior, usually intact)
  • Tubularize remaining brevis proximally with side-to-side sutures
  • Create longitudinal slit in peroneus longus
  • Pass brevis through longus, suture end-to-side or side-to-side with 2-0 FiberWire
  • Tension ankle in neutral dorsiflexion, slight eversion for tenodesis Outcome: Fair - 60% return to sport, accept some eversion weakness, longus compensates.

Tension-Free Repair Is Critical

Over-tensioning peroneal tendon repair causes failure. The tendon must glide through the fibular groove during ankle motion - excessive tension will gap the repair or restrict ankle ROM. Test: After repair, dorsiflex and plantarflex ankle through full ROM. Repair should not gap or restrict motion. If gaps: Repair is inadequate - consider tenodesis instead. If restricts ROM: Release tension or accept limited ROM in short leg cast for 4 weeks to protect repair.

Superior Peroneal Retinaculum (SPR) Repair

SPR Repair Technique - Oden Type I Acute Avulsion

Step 1Prepare Fibular Insertion Site

Goal: Create bleeding bone surface for SPR reattachment.

  • Identify avulsion site: Lateral fibular ridge (Wagstaffe tubercle area), 1-2cm proximal to malleolus tip
  • Debride soft tissue: Remove scar, periosteum to expose cortical bone
  • Roughen bone: Use curette or burr to create bleeding surface, enhance healing
  • Drill anchor holes: Position 2-3 suture anchors (3.0-3.5mm) along fibular ridge, 1cm spacing
Step 2Insert Suture Anchors

Technique:

  • Drill holes perpendicular to fibular cortex, depth 15-20mm
  • Insert suture anchors (loaded with 0 or 1 FiberWire or Ethibond)
  • Ensure secure fixation - tug on sutures to confirm anchor engagement
  • Pass suture limbs through SPR in mattress or simple fashion Number: 2-3 anchors provide sufficient fixation, spread load along SPR insertion.
Step 3Repair SPR to Fibula

Technique:

  • Reduce tendons into fibular groove, ensure anatomic position
  • Tension SPR over tendons, pulling toward fibular ridge
  • Tie sutures with ankle in neutral dorsiflexion and slight plantarflexion (relaxes tendons)
  • Secure knots - check tendons do not subluxate anteriorly during dorsiflexion-eversion stress Final check: Dorsiflex and evert ankle - tendons should remain reduced in groove, SPR taut.

Fibular Groove Deepening - Oden Type III

Groove Deepening Technique

Step 1Indication Assessment

When needed: Shallow groove (less than 2mm depth) or convex groove on preop CT or intraop assessment. Contraindication: Normal groove depth - deepening not indicated (increases morbidity). Intraoperative decision: Palpate groove with tendons reduced - if flat or convex, proceed with deepening.

Step 2Remove Cortical Bone

Technique:

  • Use sagittal saw or burr (3-4mm) to remove 2-3mm of cortical bone from groove floor
  • Create concave groove, maintain smooth surface for tendon gliding
  • Preserve lateral ridge - critical for SPR reattachment, do not undermine this cortex
  • Irrigate to remove bone debris, assess depth with probe Goal: Concave groove 3-5mm depth, allows tendons to sit posterior to lateral malleolus.
Step 3Final Groove Contouring
  • Smooth edges with rongeur or burr to prevent sharp ridges (tendon abrasion)
  • Test tendon gliding: Reduce tendons into groove, dorsiflex-plantarflex ankle - smooth glide, no catching
  • Combine with SPR repair: Groove deepening alone insufficient, must repair or reconstruct SPR

When to Combine SPR Repair and Groove Deepening

Oden Type III patients (shallow groove) often have chronic subluxation with SPR attenuation (Type II or IV features). Surgical strategy must address both anatomical deficiencies: Deepen groove to restore concavity, AND repair or reconstruct SPR to provide soft tissue restraint. Groove deepening alone has high failure rate (40%) if SPR incompetent - tendons still subluxate over deepened groove. Always assess SPR integrity intraoperatively and repair if any insufficiency detected.

Closure Technique

Closure Steps

Step 1Tendon Sheath Closure

Layer: Peroneal tendon sheath (paratenon). Suture: 3-0 Vicryl or Monocryl, running or interrupted. Technique: Approximate sheath edges over tendons, create smooth gliding surface, prevent adhesions. Drain: Generally not needed unless extensive dissection or hematoma concern.

Step 2Superficial Fascia

Layer: Superficial peroneal fascia. Suture: 2-0 Vicryl, interrupted or running. Technique: Close fascia over sheath to provide additional soft tissue coverage.

Step 3Subcutaneous and Skin

Subcutaneous: 3-0 Vicryl, buried interrupted sutures to approximate dermis. Skin: 3-0 or 4-0 Monocryl subcuticular for cosmetic closure, or interrupted nylon if concern for wound issues. Dressing: Dry gauze, soft wool padding, posterior ankle splint. Splint position: Neutral dorsiflexion, slight plantarflexion (relaxes repair), slight eversion (reduces tendon tension).

Step 4Postoperative Immobilization

Immediate: Posterior ankle splint in slight plantarflexion-eversion, elevate limb. Week 2: Remove splint at suture removal, apply short leg cast or CAM boot. Cast position: Neutral dorsiflexion if groove deepening done, slight equinus (10-15 degrees plantarflexion) if tendon repair only. Duration: 4 weeks NWB in cast, then transition to boot with progressive weight-bearing.

Wound Complications in Lateral Ankle Surgery

Lateral ankle incisions have higher wound complication risk due to thin subcutaneous tissue and superficial bone. Risk factors: Diabetes, smoking, peripheral vascular disease, prior surgery. Prevention: Meticulous hemostasis, gentle tissue handling, tension-free skin closure, elevation postoperatively. Management of dehiscence: Early recognition (within 2 weeks), local wound care, consider VAC therapy if deep, antibiotics if infection suspected, may require secondary closure or skin graft if large defect.

Intraoperative Troubleshooting

Common Intraoperative Problems and Solutions

ProblemCauseSolution
Cannot reduce tendons into grooveChronic subluxation, scarring, low-lying muscle bellySynovectomy, release adhesions, consider groove deepening if shallow
SPR tissue quality poorChronic injury, attenuated SPRAugment with local fascia or periosteum, consider reconstruction with graft
Tendon repair gaps with ankle motionOver-tensioned repair, insufficient tendon substanceRelease tension, consider tenodesis instead of primary repair
Sural nerve injury recognized intraoperativelyNerve transected during approachPrimary nerve repair with 6-0 or 7-0 nylon under loupe magnification, or bury end in muscle
Bleeding from peroneal artery branchesInjury during retraction or groove deepeningIdentify vessel, bipolar cautery or tie with 3-0 Vicryl, ensure hemostasis before closure

Complications

ComplicationIncidenceRisk FactorsPrevention/Management
Sural nerve injury (numbness, neuroma)5-10%Anterior skin incision, rough handlingPosterior incision, identify and protect nerve; If injured: primary repair or bury in muscle
Recurrent subluxation10-15% overall, 40% if groove deepening aloneSPR not repaired, shallow groove not addressed, Oden Type IIICombine SPR repair with groove deepening; Revision: SPR reconstruction with graft
Re-tear of peroneus brevis5-10% after repairOver-tensioned repair, early mobilization, low-lying muscle belly variantTension-free repair, protect 4 weeks NWB; Revision: tenodesis if re-tear
Wound complications (dehiscence, infection)3-5%Thin subcutaneous tissue, diabetes, smokingMeticulous hemostasis, gentle handling, elevation; Manage with local wound care, VAC, antibiotics
Ankle stiffness, loss of ROM5-10%Prolonged immobilization, adhesionsEarly ROM after 4-6 weeks, PT for mobilization; Revision: tenolysis if severe adhesions
Peroneal artery injury (rare)Under 1%Deep dissection, groove deepeningIdentify and ligate or repair; Vascular consult if significant bleeding

Recurrent Subluxation - Most Common Failure Mode

Recurrent subluxation after SPR repair occurs in 10-15% of cases, higher if groove deepening performed without SPR repair (40% failure). Causes: Inadequate SPR repair tension, failure to address shallow groove (Oden Type III), anchor pullout, chronic tissue attenuation. Prevention: Intraoperative stress testing (dorsiflex-evert ankle, confirm tendons stay reduced), combine SPR repair with groove deepening in Type III patients, use sufficient anchors (2-3) for load distribution. Revision strategy: SPR reconstruction using local tissue (peroneus longus slip) or allograft, consider bone block if severe groove deficiency.

Postoperative Care and Rehabilitation

Postoperative Rehabilitation Timeline

Weeks 0-4Phase 1: Protection

Goals: Protect tendon and SPR repair, prevent subluxation, allow healing.

  • Immobilization: Short leg cast or CAM boot, slight plantarflexion-eversion position
  • Weight-bearing: Non-weight bearing (NWB) with crutches
  • Elevation: Elevate limb above heart level to reduce swelling
  • DVT prophylaxis: Low molecular weight heparin or aspirin as per protocol
  • Wound care: Dry dressing, suture removal at 2 weeks, check wound healing Rationale: Tendon and SPR repairs require 4-6 weeks for initial healing - loading before this risks failure.
Weeks 4-8Phase 2: Progressive Weight-Bearing

Goals: Gradual loading, restore ankle ROM, begin gentle strengthening.

  • Immobilization: Transition to removable CAM boot at week 4
  • Weight-bearing: Progressive weight-bearing - 25% week 4, 50% week 5, 75% week 6, full by week 8
  • ROM exercises: Gentle ankle plantarflexion-dorsiflexion (avoid eversion initially)
  • Strengthening: Isometric ankle exercises, no resistance eversion yet Physiotherapy: Begin formal PT at week 6 - focus on ROM and proprioception.
Weeks 8-12Phase 3: Strengthening

Goals: Restore peroneal strength, improve proprioception, functional activities.

  • Weight-bearing: Full weight-bearing in supportive shoe
  • ROM: Full ankle ROM by week 12 (may take longer if stiffness)
  • Strengthening: Progressive resistance peroneal exercises - theraband, weights
  • Proprioception: Single-leg balance, wobble board, perturbation training
  • Functional: Walking progression, elliptical, swimming (no push-off initially)
Weeks 12-24Phase 4: Return to Sport

Goals: Sport-specific training, gradual return to full activity.

  • Criteria for progression: Pain-free ADLs, full ROM, 80% strength vs contralateral
  • Sport-specific drills: Jogging (week 12-16), cutting drills (week 16-20), plyometrics (week 20-24)
  • Bracing: Lace-up ankle brace or taping for initial return to sport
  • Return to competition: Typically 5-6 months for contact sports, 4 months for non-contact Red flags: Recurrent subluxation sensation, persistent lateral ankle pain, weakness - consider MRI and specialist review.

Accelerated Rehabilitation (Debridement Only, No Repair)

When Accelerated Protocol Appropriate

Accelerated rehab suitable for Grade 1 tears treated with debridement and synovectomy only (no tendon repair or SPR repair). Tendon integrity preserved (over 50% intact), no need for prolonged protection. Protocol: Weight-bearing as tolerated in CAM boot from week 2, transition to shoe week 4, full ROM and strengthening by week 6, return to sport week 8-12. Not suitable for repairs or tenodesis - these require standard 4 weeks NWB protection.

Accelerated Timeline (Debridement Only)

Early MobilizationWeeks 0-2
  • Removable CAM boot, weight-bearing as tolerated with crutches
  • Gentle ROM exercises, avoid forceful eversion
  • Swelling management, elevation, ice
Progressive StrengtheningWeeks 2-6
  • Transition to supportive shoe at week 4
  • Progressive resistance peroneal strengthening
  • Full ROM goals by week 6
  • Proprioception training throughout
Return to SportWeeks 6-12
  • Sport-specific drills from week 8
  • Return to competition week 10-12 if criteria met
  • Bracing optional, based on symptoms

Premature Weight-Bearing Risks Repair Failure

Weight-bearing before 4 weeks after tendon or SPR repair significantly increases failure risk. Mechanism: Loading generates tensile stress on repair site before adequate healing, causing gap or rupture. Evidence: Studies show 20-30% re-tear rate with early weight-bearing vs 5-10% with protected weight-bearing. Patient education: Emphasize importance of compliance with NWB protocol - short-term inconvenience for long-term success. Alternative: Consider accelerated protocol only if debridement without repair performed.

Outcomes and Prognosis

ProcedureReturn to SportPatient SatisfactionRe-operation RateKey Outcome Factors
Acute SPR repair (within 6 weeks)90%85-90% satisfied5-10%Timing critical - early repair achieves best outcomes
Delayed SPR repair or reconstruction60-70%70-80% satisfied15-20%Tissue quality poor, higher failure rate
Peroneus brevis tubularization repair80%80-85% satisfied5-10% re-tearTension-free repair, early PT important
Tenodesis (brevis to longus)60%70-75% satisfiedUnder 5% revisionAccept some eversion weakness, functional limitation

Predictors of Poor Outcome

Poor prognostic factors:

  • Delayed surgery - Over 6 weeks from acute SPR injury (60% vs 90% return to sport)
  • Low-lying muscle belly variant - Recurrent tears common even after repair
  • Severe tendon degeneration - Tissue quality poor, repair under tension fails
  • Oden Type III with shallow groove - Higher recurrent subluxation if groove not deepened
  • Worker's compensation claims - Poorer outcomes regardless of surgical technique

Optimal outcome profile: Young athlete, acute SPR avulsion within 6 weeks, Oden Type I, normal groove anatomy, compliant with rehab protocol - expect over 90% return to pre-injury sport level.

Long-Term Outcomes and Function

Sport-specific return rates:

  • Cutting sports (soccer, basketball): 80-85% return to same level, 5-6 months timeline
  • Running sports (track, cross-country): 90% return, 4-5 months timeline
  • Contact sports (rugby, AFL): 75-80% return, 6-8 months timeline
  • Recreational athletes: 90% return, accept lower intensity if needed

Functional limitations after tenodesis:

  • Loss of isolated peroneus brevis function (5th metatarsal base eversion)
  • Compensated by peroneus longus (preserves overall eversion strength)
  • Patients may notice weakness with single-leg lateral push-off
  • Generally well-tolerated in non-athletes, recreational athletes accept trade-off

Evidence Base and Key Studies

Acute Superior Peroneal Retinaculum Repair - Timing and Outcomes

4
Dombek MF et al • Foot Ankle Int (2003)
Key Findings:
  • Retrospective series of 30 patients with acute SPR injury undergoing surgical repair
  • Surgery within 6 weeks: 90% return to sport at pre-injury level
  • Surgery after 6 weeks: 60% return to sport, tissue quality poor
  • Mean time to return: 5.2 months (early group) vs 8.1 months (late group)
  • Recurrent subluxation: 5% early vs 20% delayed repair
Clinical Implication: Early surgical repair of acute SPR injuries within 6 weeks achieves superior outcomes - emphasizes importance of timely diagnosis and referral.
Limitation: Retrospective design, small numbers, selection bias (operative cases only).

Peroneus Brevis Split Tears - Prevalence and MRI Accuracy

3
Roster B et al • Foot Ankle Clin (2006)
Key Findings:
  • Cadaveric and MRI correlation study of peroneal tendon pathology
  • 77% of symptomatic patients had peroneus brevis tears on surgery
  • MRI sensitivity 90% for detection of longitudinal splits
  • Comma sign on axial MRI highly specific for split tear
  • Low-lying muscle belly variant present in 15-20%, doubles tear risk
Clinical Implication: MRI is gold standard for diagnosing peroneal tendon pathology - high sensitivity justifies imaging in chronic lateral ankle pain cases.
Limitation: Cadaveric study, selection bias toward severe pathology.

Fibular Groove Deepening Combined with SPR Repair - Outcomes

4
Porter D et al • Foot Ankle Int (2005)
Key Findings:
  • Retrospective series: 31 patients with chronic subluxation, shallow groove (Oden Type III)
  • Combined groove deepening and SPR repair: 85% good-excellent outcomes
  • Groove deepening alone (historical comparison): 60% failure rate
  • Recurrent subluxation: 10% with combined procedure vs 40% groove deepening alone
  • Mean return to sport: 6.5 months
Clinical Implication: Oden Type III (shallow groove) patients require both groove deepening and SPR repair - single intervention insufficient.
Limitation: Non-randomized, retrospective, historical comparison group.

Peroneus Brevis Tenodesis for Irreparable Tears - Functional Outcomes

4
Redfern D et al • Foot Ankle Int (2010)
Key Findings:
  • Case series of 22 patients with irreparable brevis tears treated with tenodesis to longus
  • 60% returned to sports at lower intensity, 40% unable to return to cutting sports
  • Mean AOFAS score improved from 52 to 78
  • Patient satisfaction: 70% satisfied with trade-off (pain relief vs function)
  • Eversion strength testing: 80% of contralateral at final follow-up
Clinical Implication: Tenodesis is salvage procedure for irreparable tears - relieves pain but accept functional compromise, especially in high-demand athletes.
Limitation: Small series, heterogeneous tear patterns, no control group.

Low-Lying Peroneus Brevis Muscle Belly - Anatomical Variant and Tear Risk

3
Davda K et al • Foot Ankle Int (2013)
Key Findings:
  • MRI analysis of 200 ankles: 18% had low-lying muscle belly extending into fibular groove
  • Tear prevalence: 42% in low-lying variant vs 18% in normal anatomy
  • Low-lying variant associated with younger age at presentation (mean 28 vs 38 years)
  • Recurrent tear after repair: 15% in low-lying variant vs 5% in normal anatomy
  • Surgical consideration: May require more extensive tendon debridement or earlier tenodesis
Clinical Implication: Low-lying muscle belly variant is significant risk factor for peroneal tears and recurrence - identify on preoperative MRI to guide surgical planning and patient counseling.
Limitation: MRI-based anatomical study, correlates variant with tear prevalence but not surgical outcomes directly.

Exam Viva Scenarios

Practice these scenarios to excel in your viva examination

VIVA SCENARIOStandard

Scenario 1: Acute Peroneal Subluxation in Athlete

EXAMINER

"A 24-year-old basketball player presents with acute onset lateral ankle pain after landing from a jump with forced dorsiflexion and eversion. He reports feeling a pop and now has a painful snapping sensation with ankle motion. On examination, you palpate a subluxating structure posterior to the lateral malleolus during dorsiflexion-eversion. What is your assessment and management?"

EXCEPTIONAL ANSWER
This presentation is concerning for acute superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) injury with peroneal tendon subluxation. I would take a systematic approach: First, history confirms acute forced dorsiflexion-eversion mechanism - classic for SPR avulsion. Second, examination demonstrates positive peroneal subluxation test with palpable snap. I would assess neurovascular status and exclude ankle fracture. Third, investigations - plain radiographs to exclude bony avulsion or fibular fracture, then MRI to confirm SPR injury pattern (likely Oden Type I fibular avulsion) and assess for associated peroneus brevis tear. Management: Given this is an acute injury in a high-demand athlete, I would recommend surgical repair within 6 weeks - evidence shows 90 percent return to sport with early repair versus 60 percent if delayed. Operative plan includes open SPR repair to fibula using suture anchors, intraoperative assessment for peroneus brevis tear (debride or repair if present), and postoperative protocol with 4 weeks non-weight-bearing in cast followed by progressive rehabilitation. I would counsel about excellent prognosis with early surgery, 5-6 month return to sport timeline, and small risk of recurrent subluxation or sural nerve numbness.
KEY POINTS TO SCORE
Recognize acute SPR injury mechanism - forced dorsiflexion-eversion
Perform peroneal subluxation test - passive dorsiflexion-eversion with active resistance
MRI confirms diagnosis - SPR discontinuity, assess for peroneus brevis tear
Early surgical repair (within 6 weeks) critical - 90% vs 60% return to sport
Open SPR repair with suture anchors, protect 4 weeks NWB, 5-6 month return
COMMON TRAPS
✗Misdiagnosing as simple ankle sprain - missing SPR injury leads to chronic subluxation
✗Delaying surgery beyond 6 weeks - tissue retraction and poor quality reduce success
✗Failing to assess for peroneus brevis tear - 30% association, needs concurrent treatment
LIKELY FOLLOW-UPS
"What is the Oden classification and how does it guide surgical strategy?"
"What is your postoperative rehabilitation protocol after SPR repair?"
"How would you manage recurrent subluxation after failed SPR repair?"
VIVA SCENARIOChallenging

Scenario 2: Chronic Lateral Ankle Pain - Peroneus Brevis Tear

EXAMINER

"A 35-year-old recreational runner presents with 6 months of lateral ankle pain posterior to the malleolus, worse with activity. Multiple physiotherapy sessions have not helped. MRI demonstrates a longitudinal split tear of the peroneus brevis involving 60 percent of the tendon width. Walk me through your surgical approach and technique for this pathology."

EXCEPTIONAL ANSWER
This is a Grade 2 peroneus brevis tear requiring tubularization repair. Surgical approach: Patient positioning is supine with ipsilateral hip bump for internal rotation. I use a curvilinear lateral incision, 8-10cm, following the posterior fibular border from 6cm proximal to malleolus to 3cm distal. Critical step is identifying and protecting the sural nerve which runs 1-2cm anterior to the incision line - I retract this anteriorly with the skin flap to avoid injury. I incise the superficial fascia and then the superior peroneal retinaculum longitudinally to expose the peroneal tendons. Key steps: First, I perform thorough synovectomy to visualize the pathology clearly. Second, I assess the tear extent - in this case 60 percent width indicates Grade 2, suitable for repair. Third, I debride the split edges minimally to healthy tissue. Fourth, tubularization repair using 2-0 FiberWire in side-to-side fashion with running or interrupted sutures to close the longitudinal split and restore tubular contour. Critical technical point: the repair must be tension-free - I test by dorsiflexing and plantarflexing the ankle through full ROM to ensure the repair does not gap. If it gaps, I would consider tenodesis instead. Fifth, I inspect the SPR - if intact, I close it primarily; if attenuated, I repair it to the fibular ridge with suture anchors. Closure in layers: tendon sheath with 3-0 Vicryl, superficial fascia, subcutaneous, skin. Postoperative protocol includes 4 weeks non-weight-bearing in short leg cast in slight plantarflexion-eversion position, then progressive weight-bearing in CAM boot from weeks 4-8, and formal physiotherapy from week 6 with return to running at 4-5 months. I would counsel about 80 percent good-excellent outcomes with this procedure and small risk of re-tear or recurrent symptoms.
KEY POINTS TO SCORE
Lateral approach - curvilinear incision posterior to fibula, protect sural nerve
Synovectomy first to visualize pathology, then assess tear grade
Grade 2 (50-100% width) - tubularization repair with 2-0 FiberWire side-to-side
Tension-free repair critical - test with ankle ROM, must not gap
Postoperative: 4 weeks NWB cast, progressive WB weeks 4-8, PT week 6 onwards
COMMON TRAPS
✗Injuring sural nerve - incision must be posterior to fibular border, identify nerve early
✗Over-tensioning repair - causes gap or restricts ROM, consider tenodesis if repair under tension
✗Failing to assess SPR integrity - concurrent SPR injury common, must repair if incompetent
LIKELY FOLLOW-UPS
"What is your threshold for performing tenodesis instead of primary repair?"
"How would you manage a low-lying muscle belly variant found intraoperatively?"
"What are the functional outcomes and limitations after peroneus brevis tenodesis?"
VIVA SCENARIOCritical

Scenario 3: Recurrent Subluxation After Failed SPR Repair

EXAMINER

"A 28-year-old footballer underwent SPR repair 18 months ago but has recurrent painful subluxation of the peroneal tendons. MRI shows attenuated SPR tissue and a shallow fibular groove. He wants to return to competitive sport. How do you manage this complex revision case?"

EXCEPTIONAL ANSWER
This is a failed primary SPR repair with chronic recurrent subluxation - a challenging revision scenario. My assessment: This patient likely has mixed Oden pathology - original acute Type I injury (fibular avulsion) now has Type IV features (chronic scarred SPR) with Type III anatomical deficiency (shallow groove). The shallow groove was likely not addressed at index surgery, leading to recurrent subluxation despite SPR repair. Management approach: First, I would obtain CT scan to precisely measure fibular groove depth and assess for groove widening or convexity - this guides need for groove deepening. Second, surgical planning must address all components: SPR incompetence, shallow groove anatomy, and check for peroneus brevis tear (common with chronic subluxation). Revision surgical technique: I use the same lateral approach but expect significant scar tissue requiring careful dissection. First, I perform fibular groove deepening using sagittal saw or burr to remove 2-3mm of cortical bone, creating a concave groove 3-5mm deep while preserving the lateral ridge for SPR attachment. Second, for SPR reconstruction (as primary repair likely insufficient with scarred tissue), I have two options: use a slip of peroneus longus tendon as local autograft passed through drill holes in fibula and calcaneus, or use allograft (semitendinosus or gracilis) for reconstruction. I prefer local autograft in young athletes to avoid allograft cost and immunogenicity. Third, I address any peroneusbrevis pathology found - often chronic degenerative tears requiring debridement or tenodesis. Postoperative management is similar to primary repair: 4 weeks non-weight-bearing, then progressive loading, but I emphasize to the patient that revision surgery has lower success rate (70-80 percent vs 90 percent primary). Return to competitive sport is possible but timeline is longer - 6-8 months minimum. I would counsel about 70-75 percent satisfaction rate with revision SPR reconstruction, accept small risk of persistent symptoms, and consider alternative sports or position change if recurrent subluxation persists despite optimal surgery.
KEY POINTS TO SCORE
Revision case requires addressing all failure modes: SPR, groove anatomy, tendon pathology
CT scan preoperatively to assess groove depth - critical for surgical planning
Combine groove deepening (2-3mm cortical bone removal) with SPR reconstruction
SPR reconstruction options: peroneus longus slip autograft or allograft (semitendinosus)
Lower success rate than primary repair (70-80% vs 90%), longer return timeline (6-8 months)
COMMON TRAPS
✗Repeating primary SPR repair without addressing groove - will fail again
✗Using attenuated scarred SPR tissue for repair - inadequate, needs reconstruction
✗Over-promising outcomes - revision surgery has higher failure rate, must counsel realistically
LIKELY FOLLOW-UPS
"Describe the technique for peroneus longus slip autograft for SPR reconstruction"
"What is your threshold for using allograft versus autograft in revision cases?"
"If this patient fails revision surgery, what are your salvage options?"

MCQ Practice Points

Anatomy Question

Q: Which peroneal tendon is more commonly torn and why? A: Peroneus brevis is torn in 77 percent of cases. It lies anterior within the fibular groove, directly compressed against the fibula during ankle eversion. This compression generates shear forces on the posterior surface of the tendon, leading to longitudinal splitting. Peroneus longus lies posterior to brevis, protected from direct bony compression, and is less commonly torn (23 percent).

Classification Question

Q: What does the Oden classification for peroneal subluxation guide? A: Oden classification categorizes SPR injury patterns and guides surgical strategy. Type I: Fibular avulsion (acute, primary repair). Type II: Attenuated SPR (imbrication or reconstruction). Type III: Shallow or convex fibular groove (requires groove deepening plus SPR repair). Type IV: Chronic healed SPR (reconstruction). Surgical management must address the specific Oden type - for example, Type III requires combined groove deepening and SPR repair, as groove deepening alone has 40 percent failure rate.

Investigation Question

Q: What is the comma sign on MRI and what does it indicate? A: The comma sign is a pathognomonic finding for peroneus brevis longitudinal split tear. On axial MRI sequences, the retracted edge of the split tendon creates a C-shaped or comma appearance. This represents the posterior portion of the tendon that has split and retracted laterally within the fibular groove. High specificity for split tear diagnosis - when seen, proceed with surgical planning for debridement or repair.

Treatment Question

Q: What is the evidence for timing of acute SPR repair and how does it affect outcomes? A: Acute SPR repair within 6 weeks achieves 90 percent return to sport at pre-injury level (Dombek 2003). Delayed repair after 6 weeks has 60 percent return to sport due to tissue retraction, scarring, and poor SPR quality. The critical window is 6 weeks - after this, primary repair becomes difficult and reconstruction with graft often required. Clinical implication: Early diagnosis and referral essential for optimal outcomes in active patients with acute peroneal subluxation.

Surgical Technique Question

Q: What is the threshold for performing tenodesis versus primary repair of a peroneus brevis tear? A: Grade 1 tears (less than 50 percent tendon width) - debridement only, sufficient tendon remains for function. Grade 2 tears (50-100 percent width, repairable) - tubularization repair with side-to-side sutures. Grade 3 tears (over 50 percent tendon substance loss, severe degeneration) - tenodesis to peroneus longus, as primary repair under tension will fail. Intraoperative decision: Assess tissue quality and remaining tendon substance - if repair gaps with ankle ROM or tension excessive, proceed to tenodesis.

Complications Question

Q: What is the most common complication after peroneal tendon surgery and how is it prevented? A: Sural nerve injury occurs in 5-10 percent of lateral ankle surgeries, causing lateral foot numbness or painful neuroma. Prevention: Skin incision along posterior border of fibula (nerve is 1-2cm anterior), identify nerve early in dissection, retract anteriorly with skin flap, avoid rough handling or traction. If injured: Consider primary nerve repair with microsurgical technique if sharp transection, or bury nerve end in peroneus brevis muscle to prevent symptomatic neuroma formation.

Australian Context and Medicolegal Considerations

Australian Sports Injury Data

  • AFL and rugby: High incidence of acute peroneal subluxation (forced eversion tackles)
  • Basketball prevalence: 37 percent of athletes with ankle sprains have peroneal pathology
  • Timing pressures: Elite athletes face season pressure - balance early surgery vs conservative trial
  • Workers compensation: Tradies with chronic lateral ankle pain - consider peroneal pathology in differential

Healthcare Funding

  • Private health insurance: Usually covers peroneal surgery as medically necessary
  • Physiotherapy: Typically 5-10 sessions covered under private extras, additional out-of-pocket

Medicolegal Considerations - Delayed Diagnosis

Litigation risk: Peroneal tendon pathology commonly misdiagnosed as chronic ankle sprain, leading to prolonged conservative treatment and delayed surgery. Key documentation:

  • Document specific examination findings: tenderness over peroneal tendons vs ATFL, peroneal subluxation test result
  • Order MRI if symptoms persist over 6 weeks despite physiotherapy for presumed ankle sprain
  • Counsel patient that chronic lateral ankle pain has broad differential (ATFL, peroneal, sinus tarsi, OCD)
  • Referral timing: If conservative treatment fails at 3 months, refer to foot-ankle specialist for MRI and surgical opinion

Informed consent essential points:

  • Acute SPR repair: 90 percent return to sport, 5-10 percent recurrent subluxation, sural nerve numbness 5 percent
  • Tendon repair: 80 percent good outcomes, 5-10 percent re-tear, may require revision tenodesis
  • Tenodesis: Accept eversion weakness (60 percent return to sport level), pain relief but function compromise
  • Timeline: 5-6 months return to sport, cannot accelerate without risking failure

Private vs Public Pathway

  • Public hospital: 6-12 month wait for elective peroneal surgery (Category 3)
  • Private pathway: Surgery within 2-4 weeks if acute SPR injury (time-sensitive)
  • Workers compensation: May cover private surgery if work-related injury, requires approval
  • Recommendation: Acute SPR injuries in active patients - pursue private pathway if 6 week window critical

Return to Work Considerations

  • Sedentary work: Return at 4-6 weeks in CAM boot with progressive weight-bearing
  • Light duty: 8-12 weeks for standing/walking roles (retail, nursing)
  • Heavy manual labor: 4-6 months for return to full duties (construction, landscaping)
  • Modified duties: Coordinate with employer for sedentary role during rehab phase
  • DVA coverage: Veterans with service-related ankle injuries - DVA covers surgery and extensive physio

PERONEAL TENDON DISORDERS

High-Yield Exam Summary

Key Anatomy

  • •Peroneus brevis = anterior in groove, inserts 5th metatarsal base, torn 77% of cases
  • •Peroneus longus = posterior, inserts 1st metatarsal/medial cuneiform, torn 23%
  • •Superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) = lateral fibular ridge to calcaneus, prevents subluxation
  • •Fibular groove = retrofibular, 1cm wide, 2-3mm deep (shallow if less than 2mm = Oden Type III)
  • •Low-lying muscle belly variant = 15-20% prevalence, doubles tear risk, extends into groove
  • •Sural nerve = 1-2cm anterior to posterior fibular border, at-risk in lateral approach

Classification

  • •Peroneus brevis tears: Grade 1 (under 50% width) = debridement, Grade 2 (50-100% repairable) = tubularization, Grade 3 (over 50% loss) = tenodesis
  • •Oden Type I = SPR fibular avulsion (acute, primary repair)
  • •Oden Type II = SPR attenuated (imbrication or reconstruction)
  • •Oden Type III = shallow/convex groove (deepening + SPR repair)
  • •Oden Type IV = chronic scarred SPR (reconstruction)
  • •Comma sign on MRI = retracted split tendon edge, pathognomonic for longitudinal tear

Treatment Algorithm

  • •Acute SPR avulsion (within 6 weeks) = open SPR repair with suture anchors (90% return to sport)
  • •Delayed SPR injury (after 6 weeks) = SPR reconstruction with autograft or allograft (60% return)
  • •Grade 1 brevis tear = debridement, synovectomy (90% return, accelerated rehab possible)
  • •Grade 2 brevis tear = tubularization repair with 2-0 FiberWire (80% good outcomes)
  • •Grade 3 irreparable tear = tenodesis to longus (60% return, accept eversion weakness)
  • •Oden Type III = combine groove deepening (2-3mm bone removal) + SPR repair (never alone)

Surgical Pearls

  • •Lateral approach = posterior fibular border incision, protect sural nerve anteriorly
  • •Tension-free repair = test with ankle ROM, must not gap or restrict motion
  • •Groove deepening = remove 2-3mm cortical bone, preserve lateral ridge for SPR
  • •SPR repair = 2-3 suture anchors to fibular ridge, tie with ankle in neutral-slight plantarflexion
  • •Postop protocol = 4 weeks NWB in cast (slight plantarflexion-eversion), then progressive WB
  • •Return to sport = 5-6 months for SPR repair, 4-5 months for tendon repair alone

Complications

  • •Sural nerve injury = 5-10% (numbness, neuroma), prevent with posterior incision and early identification
  • •Recurrent subluxation = 10-15% overall, 40% if groove deepening without SPR repair
  • •Re-tear of brevis = 5-10% after repair (higher if low-lying muscle belly or over-tensioned)
  • •Wound complications = 3-5% (thin subcutaneous tissue), manage with local care, VAC, antibiotics
  • •Ankle stiffness = 5-10%, prevent with early ROM after 4-6 weeks, aggressive PT
  • •Revision surgery needed = 10-15%, lower success rate (70-80% vs 90% primary)
Quick Stats
Reading Time161 min
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