Tibialis posterior dysfunction

Tibialis posterior dysfunction is common, mostly affecting middle-aged and elderly females, and can progress to adult-acquired flatfoot disease.

Pathology

Dysfunction occurs secondary from repetitive overloading resulting in degeneration, which occurs in the typical continuum of tenosynovitis and tendinosis progressing to partial and full-thickness tendon tears. Elongation can also occur without tearing, with as little as 1 cm of elongation resulting in dysfunction .

Tibialis posterior can tear in its :

  • supramalleolar part (uncommon)
  • retromalleolar part
  • inframalleolar part (most common)
Etiology

Tibialis posterior dysfunction can be secondary to :

  • trauma
  • underlying disease, e.g. inflammatory arthropathy
  • idiopathic
  • functional, e.g. tarsal coalition
Risk factors

Radiographic features

Plain radiograph

Secondary features of tibialis posterior dysfunction include :

Ultrasound
  • tendon sheath effusion and diameter >7 mm reflects tenosynovitis