[Morton's disease: optic and electron microscopy observations]


Published online: Sep 27 1991

L De Palma, and A Tulli.

Istituto di Clinica Ortopedica, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore-Roma, Italy.

Abstract

The authors performed an optic and electron-microscope investigation above the common digital nerve of the foot, whose fragments had been surgically removed from patients suffering from "Morton metatarsalgia" (neuroma). Histological sections were taken from pre-stenotic swelling in patients with clinical symptoms persisting for one year; perineural thickening without evidence of fibroblastic proliferation could be demonstrated, together with an intraneural deposition of an amorphous substance. In other patients suffering from Morton's disease for a longer time, a more pronounced epineural thickening in the pre-stenotic zone could be shown, with partial replacement of nerve fibers by amorphous substance. In the same patients endoneural fibrositis was seen at the level of the stenosis. Electron-microscopy in patients after one year showed an increase in collagenous endoneural fibers and microfibrils. These histopathological findings suggest a compressive mechanism in the pathogenesis of the damage to the common interdigital nerve in Morton's disease, caused by the extrinsic anatomical structures surrounding the nerve. The so-called "neuroma" can be identified with the pre-stenotic swelling.