Morton's neuroma differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions
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** [[Osteomyelitis]] | ** [[Osteomyelitis]] | ||
** [[Localized disease|Localized]] [[vasculitis]] | ** [[Localized disease|Localized]] [[vasculitis]] | ||
** [[Ischemia]] | ** [[Ischemia]] or [[Lack (manque)|lack]] of [[blood flow]] through [[plantar]] digital [[artery]], it [[Precedex|precedes]] the [[fibrous]] [[Thickener|thickening]] around the [[nerve]] known as [[Perineural fibroma|perineural]] [[fibrosis]] | ||
** [[Tarsal tunnel syndrome]] | ** [[Tarsal tunnel syndrome]] | ||
** [[Rheumatoid arthritis]] | ** [[Rheumatoid arthritis]] |
Revision as of 22:29, 17 June 2019
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sara Mohsin, M.D.[2]
Overview
Morton's neuroma must be differentiated from other causes of pain in the forefoot such as capsulitis, intermetatarsal bursitis, arthritis of intermetatarsal joints, calluses, stress fractures, and Freiberg's disease.
Differentiating Morton's Neuroma from other Diseases
- Morton's neuroma must be differentiated from other causes of pain in the forefoot because too often all forefoot pain is categorized as neuroma
- Since a neuroma is a soft tissue condition, an MRI should be helpful in diagnosis, however, often an MRI will be inconclusive for neuroma even though a neuroma exists
- Other conditions to consider are:
- Metatarsophalangeal joint capsulitis/metatarsalgia
- Intermetatarsal bursitis between the third and fourth metatarsal bones will also give neuroma type symptoms because it too puts pressure on the nerve
- Inflammatory arthritis of joints that join the toes to the foot
- Calluses
- Metatarsal stress fracture
- Freiberg's disease
- Osteomyelitis
- Localized vasculitis
- Ischemia or lack of blood flow through plantar digital artery, it precedes the fibrous thickening around the nerve known as perineural fibrosis
- Tarsal tunnel syndrome
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Peripheral neuritis
- Synovitis
- Tendonitis
- Avascular necrosis
Disease/Condition | Underlying Etiology | Pathophysiology | Clinical presentation | Other associated features |
---|---|---|---|---|
Morton's neuroma |
On gross pathology, characteristic findings of morton's neuroma, include:
|
Symptoms of morton's neuroma include:
|
Usually located at the following sites:
(first toe is usually not involved) | |
Metatarsophalangeal joint capsulitis/Metatarsalgia |
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Intermetatarsal bursitis |
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Inflammatory arthritis of metatarsophalangeal joints (join the toes to the foot) | ||||
Calluses | ||||
Metatarsal stress fracture | ||||
Freiberg's disease | ||||
Osteomyelitis | ||||
Localized vasculitis | ||||
Tarsal tunnel syndrome | ||||
Rheumatoid arthritis | ||||
Peripheral neuritis | ||||
Synovitis | ||||
Tendonitis | ||||
Avascular necrosis |