Who was first to diagnose and report neuropathic arthropathy of the foot and ankle: Jean-Martin Charcot or Herbert William Page?
Autor: | Lee J. Sanders, Michael Edmonds, William Jeffcoate |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry Tabetic arthropathy Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism General surgery History 19th Century medicine.disease Diabetic foot Diabetic Foot medicine.anatomical_structure Peripheral neuropathy Tabes dorsalis Spinal osteoarthropathy Internal Medicine medicine Neuropathic arthropathy Physical therapy Humans Peripheral Nerves Ankle Arthropathy Neurogenic business Foot (unit) |
Zdroj: | Diabetologia. 56(9) |
ISSN: | 1432-0428 |
Popis: | In November 1883, Jean-Martin Charcot and Charles Féré reported on bone and joint disease of the foot in cases of tabes dorsalis, and referred to the condition as 'pied tabétique'--a disabling neuropathic osteoarthropathy that we usually now refer to as the Charcot foot. Charcot had originally described neuropathic osteoarthropathy in more proximal joints in 1868, and in his 1883 paper with Féré stated that involvement of the short bones and small joints of the foot had not yet been described. They emphasised in the paper that one of their cases was the first ever observed, two years earlier, in 1881. It is relevant, however, that it was in this same year that involvement of the foot by tabetic arthropathy was presented to the International Medical Congress in London by an English surgeon, Herbert William Page. We believe that Page was the first to diagnose and to report a case of tabetic neuropathic osteoarthropathy in which the bones of the foot and ankle were involved. He was also the first to propose a link between the tabetic foot and disease of the peripheral nerves, as opposed to the central nervous system. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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