The relationship between supination resistance and the kinetics and kinematics of the foot and ankle during gait
Autor: | Philippe C. Dixon, Sean McBride, M. Samuel Cheng, Monique Mokha |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Motion analysis medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Posture Biophysics Kinematics Supination Inverse dynamics Oxford foot model Weight-Bearing Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Physical medicine and rehabilitation Gait (human) Humans Medicine Pronation Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Range of Motion Articular Gait Foot (prosody) Foot business.industry Rehabilitation 030229 sport sciences Middle Aged Healthy Volunteers Biomechanical Phenomena body regions Kinetics medicine.anatomical_structure Gait analysis Female Ankle business human activities Ankle Joint 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Gait & Posture. 73:239-245 |
ISSN: | 0966-6362 |
Popis: | Background Clinical tests of foot posture and mobility are not strongly related to the dynamic kinematics of the foot during gait. These measures may be more directly related to foot and ankle kinetics. The supination resistance test (SRT) is a clinical test that may more directly measure forces acting on the weightbearing foot to provide clinicians with insight about the loading of foot structures. Research Question What is the relationship between the SRT in relaxed calcaneal stance and in single-leg-stance and the kinetics and kinematics of the foot and ankle during gait? Methods 10 healthy adults between the ages of 18 and 65 were recruited to participate in this study. Three-dimensional motion analysis was performed using the Oxford Foot Model during gait. The results of the SRT were compared with peak midfoot and ankle joint moments, power generation and absorption, joint angles, and peak angular velocities and accelerations. Correlation coefficients were calculated to assess the strength of relationships between these variables and the SRT. Results The SRT demonstrated significant relationships with several variables. In relaxed calcaneal stance, the SRT was inversely related to maximum midfoot pronation moments (r = −0.51), maximum midfoot plantarflexion moments (rho = −0.71), and peak midfoot power generation (r = −0.61). In single-leg-stance, the SRT was significantly related to maximum midfoot plantarflexion moments (rho = −0.55) and peak midfoot power generation (r = −0.47). Significance The SRT is significantly associated to several kinetic variables that quantify midfoot loading during gait. Interventions that decrease supination resistance may have the potential to increase midfoot power generation. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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