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ISSN: 2329-910X

Clinical Research on Foot & Ankle
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  • Clin Res Foot Ankle, Vol 13(5)
  • DOI: 10.4172/2329-910X.1000641

Is Diabetic Foot Ulcer Healing Enough

Francisco A*
Department of Clinical Research, University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain
*Corresponding Author: Francisco A, Department of Clinical Research, University Of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain, Email: francisco@gmail.com

Received: 18-Jul-2024 / Manuscript No. CRFA-24-142182 / Editor assigned: 22-Jul-2024 / PreQC No. CRFA-24-142182 (PQ) / Reviewed: 06-Aug-2024 / QC No. CRFA-24-142182 / Revised: 04-Oct-2025 / Manuscript No. CRFA-24-142182 (R) / Published Date: 11-Oct-2025 DOI: 10.4172/2329-910X.1000641

Description

The ankle is the part of the lower limb encompassing the distal portion of the leg and proximal portions of the foot. The ankle encompasses the ankle joint, an articulation between the tibia and fibula of the leg and the talus of the foot. See the page for ankle joint for more information.

The foot is the part of the lower limb distal to the ankle joint. It is covered on its dorsal surface by loosely adherent skin and on its plantar/inferior surface by thick hairless skin that is tough and strongly adherent to the underlying plantar aponeurosis. The foot contains 26 small bones that are designed for weight bearing and force distribution. The bony alignment creates three arches the provide efficient weight distribution while avoiding compression of plantar neuro-vascular structures. The three arches, medial and lateral longitudinal and the transverse arch together create an architectural vault, which is one of the strongest load-bearing structures known to mankind.

The dorsum of the foot has only one muscle (maybe 2 depending on classification). This is the extensor digitorum brevis (some authors name the most medial part of this muscle extensor hallucis brevis). Tendons are the main collagenous structures in the dorsum. The tendons connect anterior/dorsiflexor compartment muscles of the leg to the foot bones.

The plantar aspect of the foot contains the tough fibrous plantar aponeurosis covering muscles and tendons arranged in 4 layers, numbered from 1 superficial to 4 deep:

• Layer 1 consists of the abductor didgiti minimi, flexor digitorum brevis, abductor halluces.
• Layer 2 consists of the quadratus plantae, the lumbricals and the long tendons of flexor digitorum longus and flexor hallucis longus.
• Layer 3 consists of the flexor hallucis brevis, adductor hallucis and flexor digiti minimi brevis.
• Layer 4 consists of the interosseous muscles and the long tendons of peroneus/fibularis longus and tibialis posterior.

Ankle ligament injury is the most frequent cause of acute ankle pain. Hence, it is important to understand the anatomy of ankle ligaments for correct diagnosis and treatment.

The ligaments around the ankle can be divided, depending on their anatomic position, into three groups: The lateral ligaments, the deltoid ligament on the medial side and the ligaments of the tibiofibular syndesmosis that join the distal epiphyses of the tibia and fibula. The lateral collateral Ligament Complex (LCL) consists:

Anterior talofibular ligament: It is the most frequently injured ligament of the ankle. This ligament plays an important role in limiting anterior displacement of the talus and plantar flexion of the ankle.

Posterior talofibular ligament: The posterior talofibular ligament originates from the malleolar fossa, located on the medial surface of the lateral malleolus, coursing almost horizontally to insert in the posterolateral talus. It is the strongest ligament of the lateral ankle. plays only a supplementary role in ankle stability when the lateral ligament complex is intact.

Calcaneofibular ligament: The calcaneofibular ligament originates from the anterior part of the lateral malleolus. Its primary role is to restrain inversion in a neutral or dorsiflexed position, restrains subtalar inversion, thereby limiting talar tilt within the ankle mortise. Ligaments of the ankle posterior aspect primal.

The Medial Collateral Ligament (MCL), also known as deltoid ligament, is composed of two layers; superficial and deep. The MCL is a multifascicular ligament, originating from the medial malleolus to insert in the talus, calcaneus, and navicular bone. It primary restrains to valgus tilting of the talus. Both the superficial and deep layers individually resist eversion of the hindfoot. It also stabilizes ankle against plantar flexion, external rotation and pronation.

The ligaments of the tibiofibular syndesmosis consist of anterior or anteroinferior tibiofibular ligament, the posterior or posteroinferior tibiofibular ligament and the interosseous tibiofibular ligament. The syndesmotic ligament complex ensures the stability between the distal tibia and the fibula and resists the axial, rotational and translational forces that attempt to separate the tibia and fibula.

Citation: Francisco A (2025) Is Diabetic Foot Ulcer Healing Enough. Clin Res Foot Ankle 13: 641. DOI: 10.4172/2329-910X.1000641

Copyright: © 2025 Francisco A. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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