10 results on '"R. Elliot"'
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2. An integral field unit for the planetary camera and spectrograph (ELT-PCS): comparing lenslet and image slicer-based IFUs
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Navarro, Ramón, Jedamzik, Ralf, Meyer, R. Elliot, Tecza, Matthias, Thatte, Niranjan, and Sukegawa, Takashi
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- 2024
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3. HARMONI at ELT: chromatic dependence of wavefront error performance in volume phase holographic diffraction gratings
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Navarro, Ramón, Jedamzik, Ralf, Meyer, R. Elliot, Gooding, David, Tecza, Matthias, Castillo Dominguez, Edgar, Muslimov, Eduard, Paszynska, Sophie, Kariuki, James, Ozer, Zeynep, Thatte, Niranjan, Boland, Liam, Clarke, Fraser, Clawson, Andrew, Creasey, David, Ferraro-Wood, Vanessa, Lewis, Ian, McCall, Kieran, Rathmell, Cicely, and Pearson, Elroy
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- 2024
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4. Correcting non-common path aberrations with deep learning and ERIS on VLT
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Ibsen, Jorge, Chiozzi, Gianluca, Meyer, R. Elliot, Tecza, Matthias, Menduina Fernandez, Alvaro, and Thatte, Niranjan
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- 2024
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5. Profiles of objective and subjective cognitive function in Post-COVID Syndrome, COVID-19 recovered, and COVID-19 naïve individuals
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A. R. Bland, M. Barraclough, W. R. Trender, M. A. Mehta, P. J. Hellyer, A. Hampshire, I. K. Penner, R. Elliott, and S. Harenwall
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Objective cognition ,Subjective cognition ,Post-COVID ,Long-COVID ,Fatigue ,Stress ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Post-COVID Syndrome has emerged as a significant public health concern worldwide with increasing evidence to suggest that individuals who have had an acute COVID-19 infection report lingering memory and attention difficulties, even in individuals who have fully recovered and no longer experiencing symptoms of COVID-19. The present study sought to investigate the profile of objective and subjective cognitive difficulties in people who have Post-COVID Syndrome, people who have fully recovered from an acute COVID infection and people who have never had COVID-19. We further sought to explore the extent to which self-reported fatigue and stress are related to subjective and objective cognitive difficulties. 162 participants including 50 people living with Post-COVID Syndrome, 59 people who have had COVID-19 but have fully recovered and 53 people who have never experienced symptoms of COVID-19 and had never tested positive for COVID-19 were recruited from Academic Prolific to complete a series of online questionnaires and neurocognitive tasks. Subjective cognitive function was measured using the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire and objective cognitive function was measured using the Cognitron cognitive test battery. We found that objective and subjective measures of cognitive function were not significantly related, suggesting that self-reports of “brain fog” are not reflecting objectively measured cognitive dysfunction. A MANOVA revealed that subjective cognitive deficits were driven by heightened perceived stress and fatigue and not significantly related to COVID-19 status. Objective cognitive function, however, was significantly related to perceived stress and COVID status whereby we observed significant objective cognitive deficits in people who have been exposed to an acute COVID-19 infection regardless of whether they had Post-COVID Syndrome or had fully recovered, as compared to people who had never had COVID-19. This suggests that an acute infection can have long term effects on cognitive function, even without persistent COVID-19 symptoms. Encouragingly, objective cognitive function was significantly associated with time since initial infection showing that cognitive deficits improved over time for people who had recovered from COVID-19. However, we did not observe the same improvement in individuals with Post-COVID Syndrome and observed that cognitive dysfunction was significantly related to the number of neurological symptoms presently experienced. These results add to the accumulating literature that COVID-19 is associated with significant cognitive difficulties following a COVID-19 infection, which appear to improve over time for those who have recovered from COVID-19 yet persist in people living with Post-COVID Syndrome.
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- 2024
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6. Image slicing with a twist: testing and characterising a prototype image slicer for ELT-PCS
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Navarro, Ramón, Jedamzik, Ralf, Tecza, Matthias, Meyer, R. Elliot, Thatte, Niranjan, Sukegawa, Takashi, Nakayasu, Tomonao, and Koyama, Masatsugu
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- 2024
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7. HARMONI at ELT: project status and instrument overview
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Bryant, Julia J., Motohara, Kentaro, Vernet, Joël R. D., Thatte, Niranjan A., Melotte, Dave, Neichel, Benoit, Le Mignant, David, Rees, Phil, Clarke, Fraser, Ferraro-Wood, Vanessa, Gonzalez, Oscar, Jones, Maia, Álvarez Urueña, Alonso, Argelaguet Vilaseca, Heribert, Arribas Mocoroa, Santiago, Caballero, José Antonio, Carracedo Carballal, Gonzalo José, Estrada Piqueras, Alberto, Ferro, Irene, García García, Miriam, Lamperti, Isabella, Pereira Santaella, Miguel, Perna, Michele, Piqueras Lopez, Javier, Bouché, Nicolas, Boudon, Didier, Daguise, Eric, Domenis, Nicola, Fensch, Jérémy, Olivier Flasseur, Olivier, Giroud, Rémi, Guibert, Matthieu, Jarno, Aurelien, Jeanneau, Alexandre, Krogager, Jens-Kristian, Langlois, Maud, Laurent, Florence, Loupias, Magali, Migniau, Jean-Emmanuel, Nguyen, Dieu, Piqueras, Laure, Remillieux, Alban, Richard, Johan, Pecontal, Arlette, Bardou, Lisa, Barr, David, Cetre, Sylvain, Dimoudi, Sofia, Dubbeldam, Marc, Dunn, Andrew, Gadotti, Dimitri, Guy, Joss, King, David, McLeod, Anna, Morris, Simon, Morris, Tim, O'Brien, Kieran, Ronson, Emily, Smith, Russell, Staykov, Lazar, Swinbank, Mark, Accardo, Matteo, Alvarez Mendez, Domingo, Fuerte Rodriguez, Pablo Alberto, George, Elizabeth, Ives, Derek, Mehrgan, Leander, Mueller, Eric, Reyes, Javier, Conzelmann, Ralf, Gutierrez Cheetham, Pablo, Alonso Sanchez, Angel, Battaglia, Giuseppina, Cagigas, Miguel, Castro-Almazán, Julio A., Chulani, Haresh, Delgado-García, Graciela, Fernandez Izquierdo, Patricia, Esparza-Arredondo, Donaji, García-Lorenzo, Begoña, Hernández González, Alberto, Hernández Suárez, Elvio, Licandro, Javier, Joven, Enrique, López López, Roberto, Lujan Gonzalez, Alejandro Antonio, Martín Hernando, Yolanda, Martín-Navarro, Ignacio, Mediavilla, Evencio, Menéndez Mendoza, Saúl, Montoya Martínez, Luz Maria, Peñate Castro, José, Murgas, Felipe, Pallé, Enric, Pérez, Álvaro, Rasilla, Jose Luis, Rebolo, Rafael, Rodríguez, Horacio, Rodríguez Ramos, Luis Fernando, Sánchez Béjar, Victor, Shahbaz, Tariq, Vega Moreno, Afrodisio, Viera, Teodora, Bonnefoy, Mickaël, Bret, Tony, Carlotti, Alexis, Correia, Jean-Jacques, Curaba, Stéphane, Delboulbé, Alain, Guieu, Sylvain, Hours, Adrien, Hubert, Zoltan, Jocou, Laurent, Magnard, Yves, Michaud, Laurence, Moulin, Thibaut, Pancher, Fabrice, Rabou, Patrick, Rochat, Sylvain, Stadler, Eric, Contini, Thierry, Larrieu, Marie, Mamessier, Sébastien, Boebion, Olivier, Fantei-Caujolle, Yan, Lecron, Daniel, Amram, Philippe, Blanchard, Patrick, Bon, William, Bonnefoi, Anne, Bozier, Alexandre, Ceria, William, Challita, Zalpha, Charles, Yannick, Choquet, Elodie, Costille, Anne, Delsanti, Audrey, Dohlen, Kjetil, Ducret, Franck, El Hadi, Kacem, Foulon, Benjamin, Gimenez, Jean-Luc, Groussin, Olivier, Jaquet, Marc, Renault, Edgard, Rouquette, Paul, Sanchez, Patrice, Vigan, Arthur, Zavagno, Annie, Fétick, Romain, Fusco, Thierry, Héritier, Cedric, Sauvage, Jean-Francois, Vedrenne, Nicolas, Aksoy, Demet, Caldwell, Martin, Fitzpatrick, Ann, Geddert, Carl, Hiscock, Peter, Johnson, Emma, Nalagatla, Murali, Saraff, Louise, Shreeves, Joe, Tildesley, Matthew, Wells, Mark, Aretos, Anastasios, Barrett, Lee, Black, Martin, Bond, Charlotte, Brierley, Saskia, Bryson, Ian, Calderhead, Amelia, Campbell, Kenny, Carruthers, James, Chapman, Lee, Cochrane, William, Gillespie, Rory, Harman, Joel, Harvey, Douglas, Harvey, Eamonn, Johnson, Bethany, Louth, Tom, MacIntosh, Mike, MacIver, Anna, Miller, Chris, Montgomery, David, Murali, Meenu, Murray, John, O'Malley, Norman, Sanchez-Janssen, Ruben, Schwartz, Noah, Smith, Patrick, Strachan, Jonathan, Todd, Stephen, Wasley, Dawn, Wilson, Sandi, Zhou, Junyi, Bell, Eric, Gnedin, Oleg, Gultekin, Kayhan, Mateo, Mario, Meyer, Michael, Birkby, Jayne, Boland, Liam, Cappellari, Michele, Castillo Dominguez, Edgar, Gooding, David, Grisdale, Kearn, Hidalgo, Andrea, Kariuki, James, Lewis, Ian, McCall, Kieran, Meyer, R. Elliot, Muslimov, Eduard, Lowe, Adam, Ozer, Zeynep, Paszynska, Sophie, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, Tecza, Matthias, and York, Alec
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- 2024
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8. UK Foot and Ankle Thromboembolism (UK-FATE).
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Mangwani J, Houchen-Wolloff L, Malhotra K, Booth S, Smith A, Teece L, Mason LW, Shaikh R, Alfred W, Okhifun I, Cinar E, Bua N, Vemulapalli K, Acharya A, Gadd R, Money-Taylor J, Kantharaju R, Bhosale A, Bahri S, Broadbent R, Drummond I, Jones N, Shah S, Ravindrarjah T, Yasen Z, Singh K, Al-Habs R, Jeyaseelan L, Habbiba A, Walker T, Dewhurst M, Glasgow N, Eze D, Carter G, Rajan P, Patil V, Amer O, Malik K, Pavanerathan P, Mallick A, Seferiadis I, Currall V, Sadasivan P, Kumar S, Sanjani SR, Ciaccio M, Ayyaswamy B, Prasad P, Anand M, Sunilraj D, Lane S, Prathap S, Kankate R, Aktselis I, Davda K, Vijapur A, Tayyem M, Chau J, Azhar MS, Sturdee S, Hussain H, Sonde S, Luqman MQ, Farooq R, Wells G, Shenolikar A, Simons M, Hodgson P, Thomas R, Stevens S, Elhassan Y, Adeniyi A, Aspinall W, Joseph V, Day M, Tong A, Joyner C, Alzaranky M, Elhassan O, Chhantyal K, Arora A, Abiddin Z, Kucharski R, Ahmad I, Zeb J, Ishaq U, Thomas J, Jain K, Deol R, Faroug R, Johal K, Mordecai S, Argyropouos M, Chawla A, Ibrahim M, Pereira M, Barr L, Julies E, Hill F, Kapoor S, Bailey J, Mukhopadhyay I, Rana S, Tarig H, Qualaghassi M, Seewoonarian S, Rose B, Crate G, Abbott S, Fenner C, Geleit R, Yousaf S, Akram N, Al-Hubeshy Z, Patel B, Hussein M, Clark C, Giddie J, Dega R, Dasari K, Nandhara G, Kumar P, Gupta P, Poole H, Zace P, Alvi F, Jacob J, Reddy R, Sateesh V, Gledhill A, Craven J, Cichero M, Yates B, Newton A, Grice J, Fawcett N, Fraig H, Hamad F, Marsland D, Elliot R, Ghani Y, Chandrashekhar S, Millan RK, Clark A, Rahman K, Sykes M, Little Z, Saleem J, Jolly L, Jain A, Qadri A, Rymaruk S, Kulkarni A, Garabadi M, Akhtar M, Hossain M, Yunus S, Saleem M, Fong J, Islam A, Nusir B, Chapman J, Holmes D, Mamoowala N, Almond K, Wright C, Caruana E, Watson T, Allison G, Pillai A, Madhi I, Alsalihy M, Elamin K, Yip CR, Tew L, Dahiya R, Goff T, Bagshaw O, Slade H, Andrzejowski P, Gomati A, Drake C, Hind J, Morgan R, Khalaf A, Ditta A, Ramasamy A, McIntyre J, Blacklock C, Middleton S, Clayton R, Hrycaiczuk A, Thornhill C, Jeyakumar G, Vaithilingam D, Potter K, Jamal/Pete Chan B, Mohamed M, Fraser D, Elhalawany A, Beastall J, Cousins G, Nunag P, Loveday D, Bawa A, Gilmore R, Schankat K, Walls A, Corin N, Robinson P, Hepple S, Harries W, Riddick A, Winson I, Marsh L, Bashir MA, Saini J, Atkinson H, Limaye R, Johnson-Lynn S, Sethi M, Flanagan G, Uddin A, Reilly I, Martin R, Pujol-Nichol A, Carroll N, Boucher A, Alward M, Myint Y, Butler K, Kendal A, Bugeja M, Mooteeram J, Saedi F, Koc T, Morcos Z, Robertson G, Holmes N, Tribe H, Pearkes T, Soliman A, Prasanna A, Teoh K, Kamat S, Bajracharya A, Reeves J, Ngwayi M, Imtiaz G, Blackmore N, Lau B, Naik A, Tung E, Murhekar S, Ray R, Lyle S, Makwana N, Kaisi KA, Al-Musabi M, Dean M, Hughes A, Shuttlewood K, Welck M, Patel S, Sykes A, Thibbaiah MM, Hadi H, Haldar A, Ardakani AG, Jani P, Kutuzov V, Gibbons J, Trussler D, Hawley E, Akhtar S, Rajgor HD, Budair B, Prem H, Mckenzie J, Thurston D, O'Sullivan M, Elmajee M, Pond E, Zahra W, Heaver C, Igbagiri K, Gaukroger A, Solan M, Peacock C, Fan KS, Barton T, Robinson D, Graham S, Zeolla J, Everett S, Iqbal M, Gourbault L, Singh S, Tang C, Tarhini M, Khan S, Balasubramanian S, Lever C, Bansod V, Iyengar K, Wadood A, McMillan L, Toh E, Masunda S, Federer S, Ahmad F, Lashin A, Kaddah A, Oladeji E, Dawe E, Nolan C, El-Bayouk K, Dhukaram V, Chapman A, Beddard L, Thomas A, Garg V, Taylor H, Kelsall N, Roslee C, Akram N, Lowdon H, Kamel-Sherif A, Jones A, Best A, Zabaglo M, Sayani J, Kyaw O, Khin C, Ali R, Shaik Y, Hossain N, Valente L, Ajis A, Guha A, Pereira M, Ayoub A, Paraoan V, Hali N, Baird C, Kugan R, Abdallatif A, Blomfield M, Jackson G, Craven J, Malhotra A, Toner A, Render L, Ashley C, Limb R, Smith R, Hughes L, Matthews H, Shiers-Gelalis F, Ting J, Place S, Budgen A, Stanley J, and Jowett C
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- Humans, Male, Female, United Kingdom epidemiology, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Adult, Incidence, Aged, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, Rupture surgery, Venous Thromboembolism prevention & control, Venous Thromboembolism epidemiology, Venous Thromboembolism etiology, Achilles Tendon injuries, Achilles Tendon surgery, Anticoagulants therapeutic use
- Abstract
Aims: Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a potential complication of foot and ankle surgery. There is a lack of agreement on contributing risk factors and chemical prophylaxis requirements. The primary outcome of this study was to analyze the 90-day incidence of symptomatic VTE and VTE-related mortality in patients undergoing foot and ankle surgery and Achilles tendon (TA) rupture. Secondary aims were to assess the variation in the provision of chemical prophylaxis and risk factors for VTE., Methods: This was a multicentre, prospective national collaborative audit with data collection over nine months for all patients undergoing foot and ankle surgery in an operating theatre or TA rupture treatment, within participating UK hospitals. The association between VTE and thromboprophylaxis was assessed with a univariable logistic regression model. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to identify key predictors for the risk of VTE., Results: A total of 13,569 patients were included from 68 sites. Overall, 11,363 patients were available for analysis: 44.79% were elective (n = 5,090), 42.16% were trauma excluding TA ruptures (n = 4,791), 3.50% were acute diabetic procedures (n = 398), 2.44% were TA ruptures undergoing surgery (n = 277), and 7.10% were TA ruptures treated nonoperatively (n = 807). In total, 11 chemical anticoagulants were recorded, with the most common agent being low-molecular-weight heparin (n = 6,303; 56.79%). A total of 32.71% received no chemical prophylaxis. There were 99 cases of VTE (incidence 0.87% (95% CI 0.71 to 1.06)). VTE-related mortality was 0.03% (95% CI 0.005 to 0.080). Univariable analysis showed that increased age and American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) grade had higher odds of VTE, as did having previous cancer, stroke, or history of VTE. On multivariable analysis, the strongest predictors for VTE were the type of foot and ankle procedure and ASA grade., Conclusion: The 90-day incidence of symptomatic VTE and mortality related to VTE is low in foot and ankle surgery and TA management. There was notable variability in the chemical prophylaxis used. The significant risk factors associated with 90-day symptomatic VTE were TA rupture and high ASA grade., Competing Interests: J. Mangwani reports support from the Leicester Hospitals Charity, related to this study. J. Mangwani reports payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, educational events from Orthosolutions, and royalties from Meshworks, unrelated to this study. K. Malhotra reports payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speaker bureaus, manuscript writing or educational events from NewClip Technics, unrelated to this study. L. W. Mason reports royalties or licenses, consulting fees, and patents planned, issued or pending from Orthosolutions, unrelated to this study., (© 2024 The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery.)
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- 2024
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9. What Explains the Link Between Hearing and Vision Impairment and Cognitive Function? Analysis of Mediating Effects in the USA, England and Ireland.
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Matthews K, Dawes P, Elliot R, Maharani A, Pendleton N, and Tampubolon G
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- Humans, Aged, Male, Female, Aged, 80 and over, United States epidemiology, Ireland epidemiology, England epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Middle Aged, Hearing Loss epidemiology, Hearing Loss psychology, Memory, Episodic, Exercise physiology, Allostasis physiology, Cognition physiology, Latent Class Analysis, Social Participation, Vision Disorders epidemiology, Vision Disorders physiopathology, Vision Disorders psychology, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Depression epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Hearing and vision impairments are associated with cognitive decline and dementia risk. Explanations for this include age-related processes impacting on sensory and cognitive function (common cause), or sensory impairments having a direct or indirect impact on cognition via social engagement, depression and physical activity (cascade). We tested whether associations between hearing, vision and episodic memory were mediated by allostatic load, social engagement, depression and physical activity., Methods: We used structural equation modelling with cross-sectional data from the USA (n = 4746, aged 50-101), England (n = 4907, aged 50-89) and Ireland (4292, aged 50-80) to model factors related to the common cause (indexed by allostatic load) and the cascade hypothesis with respect to cognitive ability (episodic memory)., Results: Poorer hearing/vision was associated with lower social engagement, depression and sedentary lifestyle. Poor vision was not related to allostatic load, and poor hearing was associated with allostatic load in only one data set, contributing to a common-cause hypothesis. Lower social engagement, depression and a sedentary lifestyle were associated with poorer episodic memory, contributing to the cascade hypothesis. Using effect estimates to calculate the proportion of the total effects mediated by the combined mediator variables, up to two fifths of the relationship between hearing and vision with episodic memory can be explained by the mediators., Conclusions: The association between hearing, vision and episodic memory is mediated by allostatic load, social engagement, depression, and physical activity. The finding that social engagement, depression, and physical activity mediate the association between sensory abilities and cognitive function supported the cascade hypotheses. Interventions to improve healthy lifestyle, reduce depression and foster social engagement of older people with sensory impairments are likely to be beneficial in preventing cognitive decline and dementia., (© 2024 The Author(s). International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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10. Does foot shape really matter? Correlation of patient reported outcomes with radiographic assessment in progressive collapsing foot deformity reconstruction: A systematic review.
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Poutoglidou F, Marsland D, and Elliot R
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- Humans, Radiography, Foot Deformities surgery, Foot Deformities diagnostic imaging, Foot diagnostic imaging, Foot surgery, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods, Patient Reported Outcome Measures
- Abstract
Background: In progressive collapsing foot deformity (PCFD), the goal of surgery is to obtain a well-balanced plantigrade foot. It remains unclear if restoration of the alignment and subsequent improvement in radiological parameters is associated with improved patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). The aim of the current systematic review was to investigate whether there is a correlation between radiographic assessment and PROMs in patients treated surgically for flexible PCFD., Materials and Methods: The study was conducted in compliance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement guidelines. A comprehensive literature search was performed in Pubmed, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trails (CENTRAL), and KINAHL. We included all the studies reporting both PROMs and radiological outcomes in patients treated surgically for PCFD. The quality of the included studies was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Critical Appraisal tool., Results: Six retrospective studies were included. Radiological parameters related to forefoot plantarflexion were associated with statistically significant differences in postoperative PROMs. A neutral hindfoot and midfoot position was positively correlated with postoperative PROMs but a statistically significant difference could not be established in all studies. The medial arch height was positively correlated with PROMs, but in one study this was the case only in revision surgeries., Conclusion: The literature so far suggests restoration of the alignment may be associated with improved PROMs. Future prospective studies that investigate possible radiological and clinical correlations in PCFD surgery are needed., Level of Evidence: III., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest We have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 European Foot and Ankle Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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