Practice-Ready Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Surgery (PROFAS) Webinar Series 2026 Practice-Ready Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Surgery (PROFAS) Webinar Series 2026 A new joint initiative from BOFAS, BOA and BJJ - Brought to you by the T&O Education Partnership 21 November 2025 Read more
BOFAS VTE Position Statement BOFAS VTE Position Statement Updated Statement June 2025 20 July 2025 Click here to access the newly updated BOFAS Position Statement for VTE Prophylaxis Read more
Registration Open for BOFAS 2025 (Nov) Registration Open for BOFAS 2025 (Nov) Click to Register Now! 25 June 2025 Read more
20Apr2026 BOFAS Diabetic Foot Principles Course 20/04/2026 Read more BOFAS Diabetic Foot Principles Course 20th April 2026, Delta by Marriott Hotel, Milton Keynes £150.00 Read more
29Apr2026 BOFAS Trauma Course 29/04/2026 Read more BOFAS Trauma Course 29th April 2026, Bristol £150 Read more
15May2026 BOFAS Allied Health Professionals Course 15/05/2026 Read more BOFAS Allied Health Professionals Course 15th May 2026, Bournemouth Read more
2Jul2026 BOFAS Basics & Advanced Arthroscopy Skills Course 02/07/2026 Read more BOFAS Basics & Advanced Arthroscopy Skills Course 2nd-3rd July 2026, Solihull Read more
1Oct2026 BOFAS Principles Course 01/10/2026 Read more BOFAS Principles Course 1st-2nd October 2026, Glasgow £325.00 Read more
6May2026 Nordic Foot & Ankle Congress 06/05/2026 - 07/05/2026 Read more Nordic Foot & Ankle Congress BOFAS Members have been invited to the Nordic Foot & Ankle Congress May 6/7 2026 in Oslo. Read more
Togay Koç / 06 June 2023 / Categories: Abstracts, 2023, Podium Partial Achilles Tendon Tear – a figure of our IMAGination? P. Seyed-Safi, O. Naji, R. Faroug, A. Beer, A. Vijapur, U. Oduoza, K. Johal, S. Mordecai, R. Deol, K. Davda, N. Sivanadarajah, E. Ieong, B. Rudge Aim: Our collaborative study aims to demonstrate that acute partial Achilles Tendon Tears (ATTs) are not separate diagnostic entities from full ATTs. and should be thought of as a continuum rather than binary partial or full. Methods: We pooled anonymised data from four hospitals, identifying patients with acute partial ATTs on USS reports from 2019-2021. Patients were only included if they had an acute injury and no previous background Achilles tendinopathy. Results: 91 patients had acute partial ATTs reported on USS. 74/91 (81%) of patients had clinical findings in keeping with a full ATT (positive Simmonds test, palpable gap). 88/91 (97%) of patients were managed according to local full ATT protocols. 2 patients had MRIs – one showed no tear, the other showed a full rupture. 2 patients underwent surgical repair and both intra-operatively were found to have full ATTs. Conclusion: Our regional data suggests that a significant proportion (81%) of USS diagnosed partial ATTs may in fact be misdiagnosed full ATTs. All injuries clinically suspicious for an ATT should be managed according to local Achilles Protocol. USS is useful to diagnose the presence or absence of a tear but is not good at differentiating partial vs full tear. There is significant tendon end fibrillation and overlap on USS of an acute full ATT, which can give the impression of a partial ATT. More research is needed into whether any threshold exists to support the current distinction of “partial” and “full” as relates to management and outcomes. Print 698 Tags: Achilles Documents to download Partial Achilles Tendon Tear – a figure of our IMAGination?(.pdf, 129.9 KB) - 1476 download(s)