Club foot or clubfoot, also called congenital talipes equinovarus (CTEV), is a congenital deformity involving one foot or both. The affected foot appears to have been rotated internally at the ankle. Without treatment, people with club feet often appear to walk on their ankles or on the sides of their feet. However, with treatment, the vast majority of patients recover completely during early childhood and are able to walk and participate in athletics just as well as patients born without CTEV.
Later in life most patients will experience pain and limited mobility.
It is a relatively common birth defect, occurring in about one in every 1,000 live births. Approximately half of people with clubfoot have it affect both feet, which is called bilateral club foot. In most cases it is an isolated disorder of the limbs. It occurs in males twice as frequently as in females.
A condition of the same name appears in some non-human animals, particularly horses, though in that particular case it is more akin to stepping en pointe than sideways.
Hey baby I got clubfoot,
hey mama I got clubfoot.
Isn’t that neat?
I can’t hardly even walk,
I can’t even put on socks.
Isn’t that neat?
I got clubfoot I can hardly walk.
I got clubfoot can’t put on socks.
I got clubfoot and I can’t get a date