Rupture of the Achilles tendon is increasingly common, and
an incidence of 18 per 100,000 has been reported. The Achilles tendon is the strongest
tendon in the human body which takes its name from Achilles, from Homer’s
Iliad. Hippocrates said “this tendon, if bruised or cut, causes the most acute
fevers, induces choking, deranges the mind and at length brings death”. Since
Ambroise Paré initially described in 1575 and reported in the literature in
1633, Achilles tendon breakage has received a lot of attention.
The current treatment options can be classified as
non-operative (casting or functional bracing) or operative. Although some
authors recommend conservative management strongly, cast immobilization may
lead to elongation of the tendon with reduced strength of the calf muscles and
in a high rate of re-rupture.
As a common concept, operative regiments present a lower
rerupture rate, early functional rehabilitation, stronger push off with lower
incidence of calf atrophy. But open surgical repair of the Achilles tendon also
includes potential
problems like joint stiffness, muscles atrophy, tendo-cutaneous adhesions,
deep venous thrombosis due to prolonged immobilization after surgical repair,
infection, scarification, and wound breakdown
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