Abstract

The weakness of the tibialis anterior remains to be a controversial topic. There has been no study that used electrophysiological assessment of the function of the lumbar and sacral peripheral motor nerves. The aim is to evaluate surgical outcomes in patients with weakness of the tibialis anterior using neurological and electrophysiological assessments.We enrolled 53 patients. Tibialis anterior weakness was quantified by muscle strength, as assessed using a manual muscle test on a scale of 1 through 5, with scores <5 indicating weakness. Postoperative improvement in muscle strength was classified as excellent (5 grades recovered), good (more than one grade recovered), or fair (less than one grade recovered).Surgical outcomes for tibialis anterior function were categorized as “excellent” in 31, “good” in 8, “fair” in 14 patients. Significant difference in outcomes were observed depending on diabetes mellitus status, type of surgery, and the compound muscle action potentials amplitudes of the abductor hallucis and extensor digitorum brevis (p < 0.05). Surgical outcomes were classified into two groups, patients with excellent and good outcomes (Group 1) and patients with fair outcome (Group 2). Using the forward selection stepwise method, sex and the compound muscle action potentials amplitudes of the extensor digitorum brevis were identified as significant factors for their positive association with Group 1 status. The diagnostic power of the predicted probability was as high as 0.87 in terms of area under curve of the receiver operating characteristic curve.There was a significant correlation between the prognosis of tibialis anterior weakness and sex and the compound muscle action potentials amplitude of extensor digitorum brevis, suggesting that recording the compound muscle action potentials amplitude of extensor digitorum brevis will aid the outcome assessment of future surgical interventions for tibialis anterior weakness.

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