Foot
Hallux Sesamoid Fracture
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Hallux Sesamoid Fracture
, Sesamoid Fracture
See Also
Toe Fracture
Physiology
Hallux Sesamoids
Two flat bones at plantar first MTP base of great toe
Thumb also has two similar sesamoid bones at the base of the first MCP
Function
Sesamoids are embedded within tendons at high stress joint surfaces of hand and foot
Sesamoids prevent direct tendon stress during weight bearing
Injury
Medial sesamoid (larger) is more commonly injured than lateral
Risk Factors
Obesity
Increased weight bearing
Athletes with increased intensity and duration of activity
Mechanism
Trauma
due to falls
Great toe hyperextension
Metatarsophalangeal joint (MTP) dislocation
High stress activity at MTP joint in athletes
Sudden twisting or forceful foot/ankle dorsiflexion
Stress Fracture
of sesamoid (most common)
Associated with weak tendon strength, inadequate for structural support
Symptoms
Medial plantar
Foot Pain
Pain on weight bearing and great toe extension
Signs
Pain on palpation of plantar first
Metatarsal
head
Reduced and painful great toe range of motion
First toe extension refers pain to plantar 1st MTP
Passive axial compression test
Palpate sesamoid bones in neutral toe position
Apply firm pressure immediately proximal to sesamoids throughout testing
First passively dorsiflex the great toe (sesamoids will migrate distally)
Next passively plantar flex the great toe (sesamoids will migrate proximally)
Expect plantar flexion to impede proximal sesamoid migration and result in pain
Pain suggests sesamoid bone related pain (e.g.
Fracture
, sesamoiditis)
Imaging
Foot
XRAY AP and lateral
Fracture
usually found on xray
Sharp
Fracture
line separates uneven sesamoid fragments
Sesamoid partition is a common normal anatomic variant (bipartite hallux sesamoids)
Normal variant of incomplete sesamoid fusion found in 6-14% of overall population
May be difficult to distinguish from
Fracture
Bipartite hallux sesamoids have smooth, well-corticated edges
Advanced Imaging
CT or MRI may be considered when
XRay
is repeatedly non-diagnostic
Differential Diagnosis
Toe Fracture
Metatarsal Fracture
Turf Toe
Ligament or
Tendon Injury
Nerve entrapment
Sesamoiditis
Sesamoid bone edema secondary to repeated stress
Cortical disruption (
Fracture
) is absent
Management
Mild cases
Buddy taping or stiff-soled shoe
Arch supports (prefabricated or custom)
Moderate cases
Short Leg Walking Cast
or CAM Boot for 4 weeks
Consider initial non-weight bearing initially
Follow-up with
Metatarsal
supports after
Casting
Refractory pain after immobilization
Local
Corticosteroid Injection
(or
Platelet
-rich plasma injection)
Orthopedic referral for sesamoid resection (uncommon)
Complications
First MTP
Degenerative Joint Disease
Nonunion
Fracture
Course
Anticipate persistent symptoms for up to 6 months
References
Delee (2003) Orthopaedic Sports Med, p. 2512-14
Marx (2002) Rosen's Emergency Medicine, p. 731
Riveros and Valiveti (2025) Crit Dec Emerg Med 39(9): 20-1
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