Guest guest Posted September 26, 2007 Report Share Posted September 26, 2007 September 2007 Biomechanics Magazine http://www.biomech.com/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=USEZRC5EENPR0QSND LRCKHSCJUNN2JVN?articleID=201805923 Textured foot orthoses impair postural stability By: Lori Rochelle Roniger Wearing textured insoles worsened postural control in individuals with chronic ankle instability, according to a poster presented at the National Athletic Trainers' Association annual meeting in Anaheim, CA, in June. " We were surprised by this finding, " said Jay Hertel, PhD, ATC, an assistant professor of human services at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, and one of the study's authors. " We had done a previous study on healthy individuals with these same textured inserts and found that traditional force plate-based measures of postural control were enhanced by the inserts. " Studies conducted by Hertel and his colleagues have suggested that traditional foot orthoses improve balance in healthy people by enhancing plantar cutaneous stimulation, which in turn might boost lower extremity neuromuscular activation. In the current study, the researchers tested whether wearing textured insoles in the laboratory would improve the balance of individuals with chronic ankle instability. This condition may arise from proprioceptive deficits stemming from damage incurred to the ankle joint capsule and ligamentous mechanoreceptors during an initial ankle sprain, Hertel explained. " In an effort to replace this diminished articular proprioceptive information, we wanted to provide cutaneous stimulation to the plantar aspect of the foot using the textured insoles, " he said. " It is possible that chronic ankle instability creates constraints on the neuromuscular system that prevent the heightened plantar cutaneous stimulation from positively affecting balance. " Twelve men and eight women whose average age was 21.5 and who self- reported chronic ankle instability served as study subjects. They had experienced at least one substantial ankle sprain, had their ankle repetitively give way by rolling over, and scored less than 90% on both the activities of daily living and sports subscales of the Foot and Ankle Disability Index. The subjects' postural control was measured as they stood on one foot on a force plate for 10 seconds, while wearing their own low- top athletic shoes, under six conditions: with their eyes opened or closed while wearing textured shoe inserts, sham inserts, or no inserts. The textured inserts, which were designed to offer minimal mechanical support to the foot, were constructed from a plastic matting material and had four 2-mm raised nodules per cm2. The sham inserts were made from 1.5-mm rubber foam. The researchers recorded time-to-boundary measurements in the mediolateral and anteroposterior directions. Time-to-boundary data provide a spatiotemporal representation of center-of-pressure excursions by illustrating the time it would take for the center of pressure to reach the foot. Center-of-pressure data were collected at 50 Hz and provided 500 data points, from which time-to-boundary statistics were calculated. " We then performed a number of different statistical analyses on the data points at the valleys or minima because these represent the instances of greatest postural instability, when the subjects are closest to losing their balance, " Hertel said. Anteroposterior time-to-boundary minima measurements recorded while the subjects had their eyes open were significantly lower when they wore the textured insoles (12.2 sec) than when they wore the sham insoles (13.6 sec) or no insoles (14.2 sec), indicating poorer postural control under the textured insoles condition. When the subjects closed their eyes, the measurements were not significantly different. Mediolateral time-to-boundary minima were significantly lower when the subjects wore the textured insoles (2.9 sec) compared with the sham insoles (3.2 sec) or no insoles (3.3 sec). This also suggests that the subjects experienced worse balance while wearing the textured shoe inserts. Hertel noted that the textured insoles may have been slightly uncomfortable, which could have negatively affected the balance of the subjects. His research team may conduct future studies on the effects of textured insoles with shorter raised nodules. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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