Guest guest Posted September 11, 2005 Report Share Posted September 11, 2005 September 2005 http://biomech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=170701855 Foot orthosis experts explore role of muscles By: Charlie Kupperman With the American Orthotic and Prosthetic Association and Pedorthic Footwear Association annual meetings coming up, this is an appropriate time for our second O & P focus section of the year. The value of foot orthoses is widely known and accepted. Practitioners have long thought the devices helped patients by affecting their joints and skeleton, yet new research suggests they may in fact work on the patient's musculature. While more research needs to be done, it's a fascinating, healthy research-oriented debate. Although people may have differing opinions about the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan, the need to treat the returning soldiers and provide them with the best technology and rehabilitation is unquestioned. The way practitioners are using their experience working with military patients and taking it back to help their civilian patients is pushing the profession forward. And, as always, the issues of reimbursement and L-codes are covered. (Next month, we have a special section on footwear, complete with source list. - R. ) The conventional wisdom says that foot orthoses align the skeleton and affect joint motion, but a new generation of researchers is challenging that view. The most recent body of research is finding that foot orthoses have a much greater effect on muscle activity than on joint motion, according to Anne Mundermann, PhD a professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford University. Jay Hertel, PhD, ATC, an assistant professor of kinesiology and director of the athletic training research laboratory at Pennsylvania State University, confirmed Mundermann's analysis. " What we're seeing is an effect on the neuromuscular system as opposed to the skeleton, " Hertel said. Recent research certainly backs up the idea that the skeletal effects of foot orthoses are minor and not consistent. A study in the March issue of the Journal of Biomechanics found no significant differences in joint coupling pattern or variability when 11 subjects with a history of lower extremity injury wore either of two orthoses (standard or inverted) or between those subjects and 11 healthy controls. The researchers concluded that foot orthoses don't cause significant changes in rearfoot-tibial coupling. A January 2000 study in Clinical Biomechanics used medial foot orthoses and found that effects on foot eversion and tibial rotation were small and not systematic in the stance phase of running. Differences among the five subjects in the study were much greater than differences between the orthotic and control conditions. The study found significant orthotic effects only for total internal tibial rotation. But Mundermann and other researchers did find small and systematic results in a group of 21 pronating runners wearing three orthoses fabricated for different effects (Tables 1 and 2). The posted orthoses reduced maximum foot eversion and maximum foot inversion and increased vertical loading rate and maximum knee external rotation moment. Orthoses with molding and posting reduced vertical loading rate and ankle inversion moment and increased maximum foot inversion and maximum knee external rotation moment. The results were published in the March 2003 issue of Clinical Biomechanics. The major difference between this study and studies that failed to find a systematic difference is the rigorous inclusion criteria, according to Mundermann. Researchers should exercise great care when making any generalizations or conclusions based on other studies that had fewer-or no-inclusion criteria, she said. Preferred movement path A few theories try to explain the changes in muscle activation with foot orthoses. Researchers led by Benno Nigg, PhD, a professor of biomechanics at the University of Calgary, have advanced the theory that every joint has a " preferred movement path. " If an orthotic device supports a joint's preferred movement path, then it will reduce muscle activation. But if an orthosis counteracts the preferred movement path, then muscle activation will increase to maintain it, according to the latest article by Mundermann and Nigg, currently in press with Gait & Posture. Another possible explanation is that differences in footwear material may alter the input signal into the body and require different muscle activations to damp down the soft tissue vibrations of the lower leg, Mundermann said. In the Gait & Posture study, the same group of 21 pronating runners successfully maintained their " preferred movement path, " while wearing the three orthoses. The study found significantly greater muscle activation, including an increase in global electromyographic intensity, with the test orthoses than the control condition. But the runners typically showed less than 2 degrees of change in their pronation, according to the researchers. " The relatively small differences in joint motion between foot orthoses in our studies do indeed suggest that our subjects successfully tried to maintain the preferred movement path, " Mundermann said. But she noted that studies in which subjects wore orthoses for long periods of time might show more correction of their pronation, which some experts believe can cause injuries to the medial ligaments of the foot. The study found that posting and custom molding of the orthoses increased the global EMG intensity of most muscles of the lower extremity for the stance phase of running. In addition, EMG intensities in the peroneus longus and gastrocnemius medialis muscles were significantly greater for the posted orthoses than the other two test conditions during the latter phases of stance. Orthoses-related increases in EMG intensity were greater in the high- than in the low- frequency bands. In the posted condition, the highest global EMG intensity increases pre- and post-heel strike occurred in the peroneus longus and biceps femoris muscles, but only small changes occurred in the tibialis anterior muscle. In the molded condition, the highest increases in global EMG intensity pre- and post-heel strike occurred in the peroneus longus, gastrocnemius medialis, and biceps femoris muscles. Intensity increases Mundermann and Nigg speculate that muscle activation for muscle tuning may have caused increases in EMG intensities immediately after heel strike. Their 2003 study in Clinical Biomechanics found that vertical ground reaction forces and loading rates were higher for the posted than for the molded or the posted-and-molded conditions. They hypothesize that the calf muscles may be working harder in the posted condition to damp soft tissue vibrations. " The increased EMG activity of the shank muscles in the posted condition may have been required to dampen soft tissue vibrations as the greater loading rate may have moved the frequency of the ground reaction force closer to the natural frequency of the muscle packages of the lower extremity, " they wrote. A study of 12 recreational runners with lower extremity pain and structural malalignment of the foot, published in the May 1999 issue of the Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, found significant increases in EMG for the tibialis anterior and hamstring muscles when orthoses were worn. The increases in tibialis anterior and hamstring activity may be due partly to the interface of the firmer material of the orthosis with the ground and the need to contain the impact, said that study's lead author, Deborah Nawoczenski, PT, PhD, a professor of physical therapy at Ithaca College. The orthoses may also be helpful in slowing or preventing tibial rotation, which may be linked to excessive pronation and may affect the kinematics of the knee. But slowing tibial rotation may also increase the risk of tibial stress fractures, she said. Nawoczenski cautioned that EMG doesn't necessarily correlate directly to muscle force. Researchers often assume that increased EMG means more force is coming out of a muscle, but that's not always the case. Pronation effect The peroneus longus muscle probably has a greater effect on pronation- and also on tibial rotation-than the tibialis anterior muscle, Mundermann said. So it may be possible to control pronation without increasing stress on the tibia. Also, other variables, such as loading rate, may have an important effect on tibial stress, and her studies found that foot orthoses reduced loading rate. A study led by Hertel, published in the January issue of the Archives of PM & R, also found significant increases in EMG intensity with off- the-shelf orthoses, regardless of posting or foot type. The orthoses enhanced vastus medialis and gluteus medius activity during slow, controlled exercises such as the single-leg squat and lateral step- down. But the orthoses didn't cause a similar EMG increase for a more explosive exercise such as the maximal vertical jump. " We just used a very short-term orthotic intervention. We don't know if muscle activity will still be changed a month after they've been wearing it, " Hertel said. The EMG activity may be more affected by the different sensory information the runner receives from the plantar cutaneous surface of the foot, which leads to a change in behavior, Hertel said. Thus, wearing an orthosis may cause only the same changes as wearing a pair of hard-soled shoes. There's not enough evidence yet to show the orthoses are actually changing motion enough to influence muscle activity, he cautioned. To back up this view, that orthoses prompt a change in proprioception rather than a correction of movement path, Hertel has research in progress showing that patients achieved comparable improvements in balance simply wearing beach sandals with hard struts that press against the soles of the feet (in place of softer shoes) as they experienced wearing orthoses. Researchers need to explore the impact of foot orthoses on pronating runners in more detail, Mundermann said, before they can draw any conclusions. But she pointed out that there's no conclusive evidence linking pronation with an increased risk of overuse injuries. (Charlie Kupperman is a freelance writer based in San Francisco. ) Table 2. Foot orthoses study information Participants : 9 men, 12 women Pronation : 13 degrees at 4 m/s Ave weekly running distance : 15 to 40 km Running sandal : Bryce Canyon (Rockport), original inserts removed Source: Mundermann A, Wakeling JM, Nigg BM. Foot orthoses affect frequency components of muscle activity in the lower extremity. Gait Posture 2005, June 7 (Epub ahead of print) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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