Marchant Ashleigh, Wallwork Sarah B, Witchalls Jeremy, Ball Nick, Waddington Gordon
Research Institute for Sport and Exercise, University of Canberra, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
IIMPACT in Health, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Front Sports Act Living. 2024 Dec 16;6:1516182. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2024.1516182. eCollection 2024.
Previous research has demonstrated that postural stability may be improved by increasing stimulation to the somatosensory system. Wearing lower limb compression garments or textured in-soles have been found to be effective short-term methods for improving postural stability, hypothesized to be due to enhanced tactile feedback. The aim of this study was to assess whether a combined compression-tactile sock increases postural stability in healthy adults, compared to barefoot. Participants completed a sensory organization test (SOT) to assess postural stability under two conditions: (a) barefoot, and (b) wearing a compression sock with a textured inner lining (small rubber nodules on the skin side of the sole). SOT composite scores and three sensory scores - somatosensory, vestibular, visual - were assessed between the two conditions to identify whether wearing the socks was associated with enhanced postural stability. Comparisons between the two conditions were analyzed via a paired -test for the (i) entire group, and an ANOVA when the group was split into (ii) "high performers" and "low performers", according to their baseline performance on the SOT. Fifty-four participants (28 females, 26 males, mean age 40 ± 14 years) completed the study. SOT scores were not different between the compression-tactile sock and barefoot conditions when analyzed as an entire group ( > 0.0125), or when the group was split into performance groups ( > 0.0125). These findings demonstrate that, for healthy adults, mixed compression and tactile stimulation socks do not appear to be associated with improved postural stability, when measured using the sensory organization test. Although prior research indicates that wearing a compression-tactile sock improves somatosensory acuity compared to being barefoot, these benefits do not seem to carry over to postural stability. It may be that in healthy adults, the additional sensory feedback becomes redundant, or the SOT is not challenging enough for this study population.
先前的研究表明,通过增加对体感系统的刺激可以改善姿势稳定性。已发现穿着下肢压缩衣物或有纹理的鞋垫是改善姿势稳定性的有效短期方法,据推测这是由于触觉反馈增强所致。本研究的目的是评估与赤脚相比,一种兼具压缩和触觉功能的袜子是否能提高健康成年人的姿势稳定性。参与者完成了一项感觉统合测试(SOT),以评估在两种条件下的姿势稳定性:(a)赤脚,以及(b)穿着带有纹理内衬的压缩袜(鞋底皮肤侧有小橡胶结节)。在这两种条件下评估SOT综合评分和三个感觉评分——体感、前庭、视觉——以确定穿着袜子是否与姿势稳定性增强有关。通过对(i)整个组进行配对检验,以及当根据他们在SOT上的基线表现将组分为(ii)“高表现者”和“低表现者”时进行方差分析,来分析这两种条件之间的差异。五十四名参与者(28名女性,26名男性,平均年龄40±14岁)完成了该研究。当作为一个整体组进行分析时(>0.0125),或者当该组被分为不同表现组时(>0.0125),压缩触觉袜和赤脚条件下的SOT评分没有差异。这些发现表明,对于健康成年人,当使用感觉统合测试进行测量时,兼具压缩和触觉刺激功能的袜子似乎与姿势稳定性的改善无关。尽管先前的研究表明,与赤脚相比,穿着压缩触觉袜可提高体感敏锐度,但这些益处似乎并未转化为姿势稳定性的提高。可能在健康成年人中,额外的感觉反馈变得多余,或者SOT对该研究人群的挑战性不够。