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Effect of Foot Orthotics on Calcaneal Eversion During Standing and Treadmill Walking for Subjects With Abnormal Pronation.


Genova JM, Gross MT (Duke Physical Therapy, Mebane Outpatient Community Office, Mebane, NC; Division of Physical Therapy, Program in Human Movement Science, University of North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC), J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2000; 30:664-675.

The purposes of this study were to investigate the effects of foot orthoses on calcaneal calcaneal /cal·ca·ne·al/ (kal-ka´ne-al) pertaining to the calcaneus.

calcaneal

arising from or pertaining to the calcaneus.
 movement during treadmill walking and to examine the effect of shoes and foot orthoses on the static position of the calcaneus calcaneus /cal·ca·ne·us/ (kal-ka´ne-us) pl. calca´nei   [L.] heel bone; the irregular quadrangular bone at the back of the tarsus. calca´nealcalca´nean

cal·ca·ne·us or cal·ca·ne·um
n.
 bone.

This study used a within-subject with repeated measures design and an intervention of foot orthoses. The researchers tested 13 subjects (8 men [mean age = 35.8 [+ or -] 12.7 years], 5 women [mean age = 30.4 [+ or -] 10.6 years]; age range = 18-55 years) who met the inclusion criteria
For Wikipedia's inclusion criteria, see: What Wikipedia is not.


Inclusion criteria are a set of conditions that must be met in order to participate in a clinical trial.
 of abnormal pronation pronation /pro·na·tion/ (-na´shun) the act of assuming the prone position, or the state of being prone. Applied to the hand, the act of turning the palm backward (posteriorly) or downward, performed by medial rotation of the forearm.  pertaining to the longitudinal arch angle and calcaneal angle.

A custom-made plastic mold was used to indicate calcaneal position inside the shoe during static standing and treadmill walking. Three conditions were tested in static standing: barefoot before the start of the test, in shoes without orthoses, and in shoes with orthoses. All subjects also were asked to walk quickly (average velocity = 1.9 m/s) on the treadmill with and without foot orthoses. One video camcorder was used to film the calcaneal motion in both walking and static standing conditions from the posterior view at 60 Hz. Kinematic kin·e·mat·ics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The branch of mechanics that studies the motion of a body or a system of bodies without consideration given to its mass or the forces acting on it.
 data was processed using the Peak automatic digitizing module. The dependent measure used for static standing was calcaneal angle, and the dependent measures for treadmill walking included peak calcaneal eversion eversion /ever·sion/ (e-ver´zhun) a turning inside out; a turning outward.

e·ver·sion
n.
A turning outward, as of the eyelid.
 angle, calcaneal eversion angle at heel rise, stance time, time to initiation of calcaneal inversion, and percent stance time for calcaneal inversion initiation.

The results of a Tukey Honestly Significant Difference post hoc analysis and a one-way ANOVA anova

see analysis of variance.

ANOVA Analysis of variance, see there
 showed that the calcaneal eversion angle for barefoot standing (15.3 [degrees] [+ or -] 3.8 [degrees]) was significantly greater than the calcaneal eversion angles for the shoe conditions with and without foot orthoses (10.0 [degrees] [+ or -] 4.0 [degrees] and 10.9 [degrees] [+ or -] 4.6 [degrees], respectively); there was no difference in calcaneal eversion angle between the 2 shoe conditions. In treadmill walking, paired t tests showed that using foot orthoses significantly reduced both the maximum calcaneal eversion angle and average calcaneal eversion angle at heel rise by 2.1 and 2.2 degrees, respectively. The other 3 dependent measures (stance time, time to initiation of calcaneal inversion, and the percent stance time for calcaneal inversion initiation) did not show significant differences. The authors indicated that the poor statistical powers (.07-.18) for these 3 dependent measures might explain the inability to detect any difference between orthotic orthotic /or·thot·ic/ (or-thot´ik) serving to protect or to restore or improve function; pertaining to the use or application of an orthosis.

or·thot·ic
adj.
Of or relating to orthotics.
 and nonorthotic conditions.

The authors concluded that foot orthoses resulted in significant reductions in maximum calcaneal eversion and calcaneal eversion at heel rise during treadmill walking. They argued that shoes with motion control features and the same shoes with foot orthoses could effectively reduce the standing eversion angle. Shoes could be used in conjunction with foot orthoses for lower-extremity disorders.
Bob Chen, PT, PhD
New York, NY
COPYRIGHT 2001 American Physical Therapy Association, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Chen, Bob
Publication:Physical Therapy
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 1, 2001
Words:510
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