Achilles Tendon Rupture and Repair - Medical Animation
This animation may only be used in support of a single legal proceeding and for no other purpose. Read our License Agreement for details. To license this image for other purposes, click here.
Achilles Tendon Rupture and Repair - Medical Animation
MEDICAL ANIMATION TRANSCRIPT: If a person tears their Achilles tendon, the doctor may recommend a surgical procedure to repair the tendon. The Achilles tendon is a thick band of tissue that connects the two muscles in the back of the lower leg, the soleus, and gastrocnemius, to the bone in the heel of the foot called the calcaneus. It is the largest and strongest tendon in the body. It allows the foot to point downward. This movement is necessary to push off the ground to walk, jump, run, or stand on the toes. The Achilles tendon is one of the most commonly injured tendons in the body. Sudden, forceful up or down foot movements can tear or rupture the tendon. This is a common injury among adults who play sports involving running, jumping, and sudden changes of direction, like basketball, soccer, and tennis. Other risk factors for an Achilles tendon tear are aging, taking certain antibiotics, steroid injections into the tendon, being male, increased BMI, smoking, peripheral vascular disease, and diabetes. An Achilles tendon rupture can be partial or complete. A partial tear means the tendon is still connected. A complete tear means the tendon is torn in two. Surgical procedures to reconnect the two ends of the Achilles tendon can be done in one of three ways, open, mini-open, or percutaneous. During an open repair, the surgeon will make an incision down the back of the lower leg. The skin will be opened so the surgeon can see the torn tendon. The surgeon will sew the two ends together with stitches. Occasionally, some tissue will be used from the gastrocnemius. This tissue will be folded over and stitched on top of the tendon to make it stronger. Sometimes a graphed tissue from a donor is used instead. The incision will be closed with sutures or staples. During a mini-open procedure, a smaller incision will be made over the torn Achilles tendon. The skin will be opened to expose the torn tendon ends. A special tool will be inserted into the area. This tool has several small holes in it to show the surgeon precisely where to place the stitches. The stitches will pass through each hole into the skin and through the tendon. The tool will be removed, which pulls the suture under the skin so only the tendon remains attached to the suture. Then it will be turned upside down and the steps will be repeated. The surgeon will tie the stitches on the top and bottom of each side together, reconnecting the tendon. The incision will be closed with sutures or staples. During a percutaneous repair, the surgeon will make smaller surgical cuts. Three to six cuts may be made, but it depends on the surgeon. The stitches will pass through each hole and each end of the torn tendon. The stitches will be pulled together, reconnecting the tendon. The incisions will be closed with stitches.
"Thank you very much for the great work on the medical exhibits. Our trial
resulted in a $16 million verdict for a 9 year old boy with catastrophic
injuries, and the medical illustrations definitely played key role in the
trial."
David Cutt
Brayton Purcell
Salt Lake City, UT
"I have a medical illustration created by Medical Legal Art at the beginning
of every case to tell the client's story, usually before I depose the
defendant doctor. The work product and cost-efficiency are outstanding. It
is a situation where, as a trial lawyer, I don't leave home without it."
Rockne Onstad
Attorney at Law
Austin, TX
"The Doe Report is a visual feast of medical information for personal injury
lawyers."
Aaron R. Larson, Esq. President ExpertLaw.com
"You and your company are wonderful. Your service, turnaround time, quality
and price were better than I could have asked for. Please add me to your
long list of satisfied customers."
Robert F. Linton, Jr.
Linton & Hirshman
Cleveland, OH
Medical Legal Art creates medical demonstrative evidence (medical
illustrations, drawings, pictures, graphics, charts, medical animations,
anatomical models, and interactive presentations) for use during legal
proceedings, including research, demand letters, client conferences,
depositions, arbitrations, mediations, settlement conferences, mock jury
trials and for use in the courtroom. We do not provide legal or medical
advice. If you have legal questions, you should find a lawyer with whom you
can discuss your case issues. If you have medical questions, you should seek the advice of a healthcare provider.