Department of Physical Therapy, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Kinesiology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2021 Jul;49(8):2227-2237. doi: 10.1177/03635465211014854. Epub 2021 Jun 2.
Athletes, especially female athletes, experience high rates of tibial bone stress injuries (BSIs). Knowledge of tibial loads during walking and running is needed to understand injury mechanisms and design safe running progression programs.
To examine tibial loads as a function of gait speed in male and female runners.
Controlled laboratory study.
Kinematic and kinetic data were collected on 40 recreational runners (20 female, 20 male) during 4 instrumented gait speed conditions on a treadmill (walk, preferred run, slow run, fast run). Musculoskeletal modeling, using participant-specific magnetic resonance imaging and motion data, was used to estimate tibial stress. Peak tibial stress and stress-time impulse were analyzed using 2-factor multivariate analyses of variance (speed*sex) and post hoc comparisons (α = .05). Bone geometry and tibial forces and moments were examined.
Peak compression was influenced by speed ( < .001); increasing speed generally increased tibial compression in both sexes. Women displayed greater increases in peak tension ( = .001) and shear ( < .001) than men when transitioning from walking to running. Further, women displayed greater peak tibial stress overall ( < .001). Compressive and tensile stress-time impulse varied by speed ( < .001) and sex ( = .006); impulse was lower during running than walking and greater in women. A shear stress-time impulse interaction ( < .001) indicated that women displayed greater impulse relative to men when changing from a walk to a run. Compared with men, women displayed smaller tibiae ( < .001) and disproportionately lower tibial forces (≤ .001-.035).
Peak tibial stress increased with gait speed, with a 2-fold increase in running relative to walking. Women displayed greater tibial stress than men and greater increases in stress when shifting from walking to running. Sex differences appear to be the result of smaller bone geometry in women and tibial forces that were not proportionately lower, given the womens' smaller stature and lower mass relative to men.
These results may inform interventions to regulate running-related training loads and highlight a need to increase bone strength in women. Lower relative bone strength in women may contribute to a sex bias in tibial BSIs, and female runners may benefit from a slower progression when initiating a running program.
运动员,尤其是女性运动员,胫骨骨应力性损伤(BSI)发生率较高。了解行走和跑步时胫骨的受力情况,有助于理解损伤机制并设计安全的跑步进阶方案。
研究男性和女性跑步者在不同步态速度下胫骨受力情况。
对照实验室研究。
40 名休闲跑者(20 名女性,20 名男性)在跑步机上进行 4 种仪器化步态速度测试(行走、惯用跑、慢跑、快跑)时,收集运动学和动力学数据。使用参与者特异性磁共振成像和运动数据进行肌肉骨骼建模,以估计胫骨的受力情况。采用 2 因素多元方差分析(速度*性别)和事后比较(α=.05)分析峰值胫骨应力和应力时间冲量。检查骨几何形状和胫骨力和力矩。
峰值压缩受速度影响( <.001);男女的胫骨压缩均随速度增加而增加。女性从行走过渡到跑步时,峰值张力( =.001)和剪切力( <.001)的增加幅度大于男性。此外,女性的总体峰值胫骨应力更大( <.001)。压缩和拉伸的应力时间冲量随速度( <.001)和性别( =.006)而变化;跑步时比行走时的冲量更小,女性的冲量更大。剪切力-时间冲量的相互作用( <.001)表明,女性从行走过渡到跑步时,冲量比男性大。与男性相比,女性的胫骨较小( <.001),胫骨力也不成比例地较低(≤.001-.035)。
峰值胫骨应力随步态速度增加而增加,跑步时比行走时增加 2 倍。女性的胫骨应力大于男性,从行走过渡到跑步时的应力增加幅度更大。性别差异似乎是由于女性的骨骼几何形状较小以及相对于男性,胫骨力不成比例地较低所致。
这些结果可以为控制与跑步相关的训练负荷的干预措施提供信息,并强调需要增加女性的骨骼强度。女性的相对骨骼强度较低可能导致胫骨 BSI 的性别偏差,女性跑步者在开始跑步计划时可能受益于较慢的进阶。