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Changes in foot and shank coupling due to alterations in foot strike pattern during running

No / The purpose of this article is determining if and how the kinematic relationship between adjacent body segments changes when an individual’s gait
pattern is experimentally manipulated can yield insight into the robustness of the kinematic coupling across the associated joint(s). The
aim of this study was to assess the effects on the kinematic coupling between the forefoot, rearfoot and shank during ground contact of
running with alteration in foot strike pattern.
Twelve subjects ran over-ground using three different foot strike patterns (heel strike, forefoot strike, toe running). Kinematic
data were collected of the forefoot, rearfoot and shank, which were modelled as rigid segments. Coupling at the ankle-complex and
midfoot joints was assessed using cross-correlation and vector coding techniques.
In general good coupling was found between rearfoot frontal plane motion and transverse plane shank rotation regardless of
foot strike pattern. Forefoot motion was also strongly coupled with rearfoot frontal plane motion. Subtle differences were noted in the
amount of rearfoot eversion transferred into shank internal rotation in the first 10–15% of stance during heel strike running compared to
forefoot and toe running, and this was accompanied by small alterations in forefoot kinematics.
These findings indicate that during ground contact in running there is strong coupling between the rearfoot and shank
via the action of the joints in the ankle-complex. In addition, there was good coupling of both sagittal and transverse plane forefoot with
rearfoot frontal plane motion via the action of the midfoot joints.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BRADFORD/oai:bradscholars.brad.ac.uk:10454/15848
Date19 November 2007
CreatorsPohl, M.B., Buckley, John
Source SetsBradford Scholars
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeArticle, No full-text in the repository

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