Exactly what is Sinus Tarsi Syndrome? I am quite well-versed in ankle anatomy (not by choice) and I was discussing the other day with my surgeon that, after having 4 operations to finally remove the source of excruciating pain, I believe I have lateral subtalar impingement -- a condition I've had all along since my initial injury (inversion sprain July 2007) which has been masked by overwhelming pain and so not attracting my immediate attention.
My surgeon suggests anterior subtalar impingement and I go along with it and he injects with cortisone. I report back no joy. I receive in the mail today a request slip for cortisone/anaesthetic injection into sinus tarsi. Then it dawns on me.
At the very centre of the broad area (anterior to lateral malleolus) I have been finding difficult to localise is the sinus tarsi. So I scramble and try to read up on Sinus Tarsi Syndrome which I'd come across before (I now own two foot/ankle orthopaedics text books since I was determined to find out my earlier conditions ultimately with success) only to find ambiguous or vague information. I also have passive inversion in the subtalar joint -- I've reported this "feeling" to GPs but they say I am making it up -- but I now have radiographs to prove it *sigh*.
Is it a nerve condition? Is it equivalent to subtalar tissue impingement? What might I expect my surgeon to find when he sticks his arthroscope in there in a few weeks?
I certainly don't feel like a nerve is trapped -- rather that a large chunk of tissue is trapped in this lateral subtalar region preventing range of motion. I can hear it "pop" if I move the joint around (without weight-bearing) in a particular manner. I get a small amount of free movement then a very definite block if I attempt dorsiflexion very early on (a physiotherapist has measured <0 degrees).
What exactly is Sinus Tarsi Syndrome? Even though I might not have it, I'm still genuinely curious. I'm determined to have a full understanding of what is going on in there prior to arthroscopic (hopefully the last!) surgery 27 July.
Similar Threads: