Pes cavus, otherwise called clawfoot or high arch, is a human foot type in which the bottom of the foot is unmistakably empty when bearing weight. A high arch is something contrary to a level foot and is fairly less common. Pes cavus is a foot deformity described by a high arch of the foot that doesn't smooth with weight bearing; the deformity can be situated in the forefoot, midfoot, hindfoot, or in a blend of every one of these destinations
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
Marked contraction of plantar fascia with dropped forefoot, all toes hammer toes, very painful callosities, marked varus deformity Bilateral |
50 |
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
Marked contraction of plantar fascia with dropped forefoot, all toes hammer toes, very painful callosities, marked varus deformity Unilateral |
30 |
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
All toes tending to dorsiflexion, limitation of dorsiflexion at ankle to right angle, shortened plantar fascia, and marked tenderness under metatarsal heads Bilateral |
30 |
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
All toes tending to dorsiflexion, limitation of dorsiflexion at ankle to right angle, shortened plantar fascia, and marked tenderness under metatarsal heads Unilateral |
20 |
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
Great toe dorsiflexed, some limitation of dorsiflexion at ankle, definite tenderness under metatarsal heads: Bilateral |
10 |
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
Great toe dorsiflexed, some limitation of dorsiflexion at ankle, definite tenderness under metatarsal heads: Unilateral |
10 |
| Description | Percentage |
|---|---|
|
Slight |
0 |
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