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足部胼胝厚度不会在行走时牺牲保护和触觉敏感性。

Foot callus thickness does not trade off protection for tactile sensitivity during walking.

机构信息

Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.

Human Movement Science and Health, Technische Universität Chemnitz, Chemnitz, Germany.

出版信息

Nature. 2019 Jul;571(7764):261-264. doi: 10.1038/s41586-019-1345-6. Epub 2019 Jun 26.

Abstract

Until relatively recently, humans, similar to other animals, were habitually barefoot. Therefore, the soles of our feet were the only direct contact between the body and the ground when walking. There is indirect evidence that footwear such as sandals and moccasins were first invented within the past 40 thousand years, the oldest recovered footwear dates to eight thousand years ago and inexpensive shoes with cushioned heels were not developed until the Industrial Revolution. Because calluses-thickened and hardened areas of the epidermal layer of the skin-are the evolutionary solution to protecting the foot, we wondered whether they differ from shoes in maintaining tactile sensitivity during walking, especially at initial foot contact, to improve safety on surfaces that can be slippery, abrasive or otherwise injurious or uncomfortable. Here we show that, as expected, people from Kenya and the United States who frequently walk barefoot have thicker and harder calluses than those who typically use footwear. However, in contrast to shoes, callus thickness does not trade-off protection, measured as hardness and stiffness, for the ability to perceive tactile stimuli at frequencies experienced during walking. Additionally, unlike cushioned footwear, callus thickness does not affect how hard the feet strike the ground during walking, as indicated by impact forces. Along with providing protection and comfort at the cost of tactile sensitivity, cushioned footwear also lowers rates of loading at impact but increases force impulses, with unknown effects on the skeleton that merit future study.

摘要

直到最近,人类和其他动物一样,习惯赤脚行走。因此,当我们行走时,脚底是身体与地面之间唯一的直接接触点。有间接证据表明,凉鞋和鹿皮鞋等鞋类是在过去 4 万年中首次发明的,最古老的鞋类可追溯到 8000 年前,直到工业革命才有了带有缓冲脚跟的廉价鞋子。由于老茧(皮肤表皮层增厚和变硬的区域)是保护脚部的进化解决方案,我们想知道它们在行走时是否与鞋子不同,特别是在初始脚部接触时,是否能保持触觉敏感性,以提高在可能湿滑、粗糙或其他有害或不舒服的表面上的安全性。在这里,我们表明,正如预期的那样,经常赤脚行走的肯尼亚和美国人与那些经常穿鞋的人相比,脚底的老茧更厚、更硬。然而,与鞋子不同的是,老茧的厚度并不会牺牲对行走时所经历的触觉刺激的感知能力,以换取对保护的衡量(硬度和刚性)。此外,与缓冲鞋类不同的是,老茧的厚度不会影响脚部在行走时撞击地面的力度,这可以从撞击力中看出。缓冲鞋类以牺牲触觉敏感性为代价提供了保护和舒适,还降低了冲击时的加载率,但增加了力脉冲,对骨骼的未知影响值得进一步研究。

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