1Department of Exercise Sciences, Brigham Young University, 106 Smith Fieldhouse, Provo, UT 84602 USA.
Revere Health Orthopaedics, 1055 North 500 West #121, Building C, Provo, UT 84604 USA.
J Foot Ankle Res. 2019 Nov 4;12:50. doi: 10.1186/s13047-019-0361-y. eCollection 2019.
Blood flow is essential in maintaining tissue health. Thus, compromised blood flow can prevent tissue healing. An adducted hallux, as seen inside a narrow shoe, may put passive tension on the abductor hallucis, compressing the lateral plantar artery into the calcaneus and restricting blood flow. The purposes of this study were to compare lateral plantar artery blood flow before and after passive hallux adduction and to compare blood flow with arch height.
Forty-five healthy volunteers (20 female, 25 male; age = 24.8 ± 6.8 yr; height = 1.7 ± 0.1 m; weight = 73.4 ± 13.5 kg) participated in this cross-over design study. Arch height index (AHI) was calculated, and blood flow measurements were obtained using ultrasound (L8-18i transducer, GE Logiq S8). The lateral plantar artery was imaged deep to abductor hallucis for 120 s: 60 s at rest, then 60 s of passive hallux adduction. Maximal passive hallux adduction was performed by applying pressure to the medial side of the hallux. Blood flow was calculated in mL/min, and pre-passive hallux adduction was compared to blood flow during passive hallux adduction.
Log transformed data was used to run a paired t-test between the preadduction and postadduction blood flow. The volume of blood flow was 22.2% lower after passive hallux adduction compared to before (- 0.250 ± 0.063, < 0.001). As AHI decreased, there was a greater negative change in blood flow. As baseline blood flow increased, there was also a greater negative change in blood flow.
Our preliminary findings of decreased blood flow through passive hallux adduction indicate conditions that elicit passive hallux adduction (e.g. wearing narrow-toed shoes) may have important effects on foot blood flow. Individuals with lower AHI appear to have a greater risk of decreased blood flow with passive hallux adduction.
血流对于维持组织健康至关重要。因此,血流受损可能会妨碍组织愈合。在狭窄的鞋子中,可以看到拇趾内收,这可能会对拇展肌施加被动张力,将足底外侧动脉压向跟骨并限制血流。本研究的目的是比较拇趾被动内收前后足底外侧动脉的血流,并比较血流与足弓高度的关系。
45 名健康志愿者(20 名女性,25 名男性;年龄=24.8±6.8 岁;身高=1.7±0.1 米;体重=73.4±13.5 千克)参与了这项交叉设计研究。计算了足弓高度指数(AHI),并使用超声(L8-18i 换能器,GE Logiq S8)测量了血流。在拇展肌下方对足底外侧动脉进行成像,共 120 秒:静止 60 秒,然后被动内收拇趾 60 秒。通过向拇趾内侧施加压力来实现最大的被动拇趾内收。以毫升/分钟计算血流,并比较被动内收前和被动内收时的血流。
对被动内收前后的血流进行了配对 t 检验,使用了对数转换数据。与被动内收前相比,被动内收后血流减少了 22.2%(-0.250±0.063,<0.001)。随着 AHI 的降低,血流的负变化越大。随着基础血流的增加,血流的负变化也越大。
我们发现通过被动内收拇趾血流减少的初步结果表明,引起被动内收拇趾的情况(例如,穿窄头鞋)可能对足部血流有重要影响。AHI 较低的个体在被动内收拇趾时,血流减少的风险似乎更大。