Kenny Ryan P W, Eaves Daniel L, Martin Denis, Hatton Anna L, Dixon John
1School of Health and Social Care, Teesside University, Middlesbrough, TS1 3BX UK.
2School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, AU Australia.
BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil. 2019 Apr 4;11:5. doi: 10.1186/s13102-019-0117-9. eCollection 2019.
Wearing a textured shoe insole can decrease postural sway during static balance. Previous studies assessed bipedal and/or unipedal standing. In contrast, we aimed to investigate if textured insoles modulated postural sway during four stance types (bipedal, standard Romberg, tandem Romberg, and unipedal), with and without vision.
The repeated measures design involved 28 healthy young adults (13 females; mean age = 26.86 ± 6.6 yrs) performing quiet standing in the four stance types on a force platform, under two different insole conditions (textured insole; TI vs. smooth insole; SI), with eyes open and eyes closed. Postural sway was assessed via the range and standard deviation of the COP excursions in the anterior-posterior and medial-lateral sway, and overall mean velocity.
The main effect of insole type was statistically significant at the alpha = 0.05 level ( = 0.045). Compared to smooth insoles, textured insoles reduced the standard deviation of anterior-posterior excursions (APSD). While simple main effect analyses revealed this was most pronounced during eyes closed bipedal standing, insole type did not provide a statistically significant interaction with either stance or vision in this measure, or any other. Postural sway showed statistically significant increases across both stance type (bipedal < standard Romberg < tandem Romberg < unipedal), and vision (eyes closed < eyes open), in almost all measures. Stance and vision did have a statistically significant interaction in each measure, reflecting greater postural disturbances with eyes closed when stance stability decreased.
Overall, these results support textured insole use in healthy young adults to reduce postural sway measures. This is because APSD is an index of spatial variability, where a decrease is associated with improved balance and possibly translates to reduced falls risk. Placing a novel texture in the shoe presumably modulated somatosensory inputs. It is important to understand the underlying mechanisms by which textured insoles influence postural sway. As such, utilising a healthy adult group allows us to investigate possible mechanisms of textured insoles. Future research could investigate the potential underlying mechanisms of textured insole effects at a neuromuscular and cortical level, in healthy young adults.
穿着带有纹理的鞋垫可在静态平衡期间减少姿势晃动。以往研究评估了双足和/或单足站立情况。相比之下,我们旨在研究带有纹理的鞋垫在四种站立姿势(双足、标准罗姆伯格姿势、串联罗姆伯格姿势和单足)下,无论有无视觉时,是否能调节姿势晃动。
重复测量设计涉及28名健康的年轻成年人(13名女性;平均年龄 = 26.86 ± 6.6岁),他们在力平台上以四种姿势进行安静站立,处于两种不同的鞋垫条件下(带纹理的鞋垫;TI与光滑鞋垫;SI),分别睁眼和闭眼。通过重心(COP)在前 - 后和内侧 - 外侧晃动中的偏移范围和标准差以及整体平均速度来评估姿势晃动。
鞋垫类型的主效应在α = 0.05水平上具有统计学意义( = 0.045)。与光滑鞋垫相比,带纹理的鞋垫降低了前后偏移的标准差(APSD)。虽然简单主效应分析表明这在闭眼双足站立时最为明显,但在该测量或任何其他测量中,鞋垫类型与姿势或视觉均未产生具有统计学意义的交互作用。在几乎所有测量中,姿势晃动在姿势类型(双足 < 标准罗姆伯格姿势 < 串联罗姆伯格姿势 < 单足)和视觉(闭眼 < 睁眼)方面均呈现出统计学意义上的增加。姿势和视觉在每个测量中确实存在具有统计学意义的交互作用,这反映出当姿势稳定性降低时,闭眼会导致更大的姿势干扰。
总体而言,这些结果支持在健康年轻成年人中使用带纹理的鞋垫来减少姿势晃动测量值。这是因为APSD是空间变异性的指标,其降低与平衡改善相关,可能转化为跌倒风险降低。在鞋中设置新颖的纹理大概会调节体感输入。了解带纹理的鞋垫影响姿势晃动的潜在机制很重要。因此,利用健康成年人群体使我们能够研究带纹理的鞋垫的可能机制。未来的研究可以在健康年轻成年人中,在神经肌肉和皮层水平上研究带纹理的鞋垫效果的潜在机制。