D222.80Musculoskeletal

Absence of great toe

Absence of great toe

What This Code Means

Receiving DQ code D222.80 means the DoDMERB physician reviewer determined that your medical history or exam findings related to absence of great toe do not currently meet Department of Defense accession standards as defined in DoDI 6130.03.

This does not end your candidacy. Many conditions flagged under this code are waiverable. The next step is understanding the exact standard that applies to your situation and whether a waiver request is appropriate for your commissioning source.

Official Regulation Text

From DoDI 6130.03-V1, “Medical Standards for Military Service,” Change 6 (February 3, 2026)

Section 6.17.bUpper Extremity Conditions
Hand and fingers: (1) Absence of any portion of a finger proximal to the proximal interphalangeal joint, including single ray resection. (2) Absence of the distal phalanx or any part thereof of any finger, other than the little finger, if the absence interferes with hand function. (3) Absence of more than the distal phalanx of the little finger. (4) Polydactyly, if it interferes with the wearing of military equipment or function.

Waiver Outlook for Musculoskeletal Conditions

High Likelihoodif surgery (e.g., ACL reconstruction) is successful and the applicant demonstrates full recovery and range of motion

Key Factors for Waiver Approval

  • Documentation of full rehabilitation, strength, and agility
  • No recurrent dislocations or chronic pain
  • Full range of motion confirmed by orthopedic evaluation
  • Active participation in competitive sports post-recovery
Documentation Tip

For scoliosis cases, the key threshold is the Cobb angle measurement. Having your own imaging and specialist evaluation ready — rather than relying solely on DoDMERB's assessment — can strengthen your case.

This condition is covered in depth in The Ultimate DoDMERB Handbook by LTC Kirkland & Capt Dach — including real success scenarios, remedial exam strategies, and the complete waiver playbook. Get the handbook →

Read Our Full Guide on Musculoskeletal Conditions

Learn how DoDMERB evaluates musculoskeletal conditions, common waiver scenarios, documentation tips, and what to expect throughout the process.

Read the musculoskeletal guide