Ionita Cezar, Tiron Stefan, Abdallah Summer, Gheorghe-Simionesie Silvia-Andreea, Simionesie Dorin, Mitoiu Brindusa Ilinca, Belei Oana, Enatescu Ileana, Bratosin Felix, Nica Adriana Sarah
Department of Occlusion and Fixed Prosthodontics, Faculty of Dental Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Bucharest, Romania.
Dr. Tiron Medical Center, Bucharest, Romania.
J Med Life. 2025 May;18(5):455-462. doi: 10.25122/jml-2025-0084.
Growing pains affect many children, but their underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Potential contributors include anatomical malalignment and abnormal foot-pressure distribution (FPD). This study evaluated: (1) whether age, sex, and handedness correlate with growing-pain intensity, (2) whether anterior or posterior foot loading predominates in these children, and (3) whether customized plantar insoles improve subjective pain and objective postural or gait parameters. A total of 647 children (ages 3-14 years) underwent baseline stabilometric testing (Freemed platform) and were classified as anterior or posterior loaders. Pain status was recorded (absent, mild, moderate, intense). Custom insoles were prescribed for significant anomalies; 178 children returned for follow-up, including 137 who repeated platform assessments, and 178 who were reassessed for pain. Additional subgroup analyses examined insole compliance (high vs. low) and gait changes (step length, stance width, foot progression angle, single-limb stance, gait velocity). Of the initial 647 children, 87% demonstrated posterior orientation, and 55% reported some level of pain. No significant correlations emerged between pain intensity and age, sex, or handedness. Among the 178 reassessed patients, those with higher insole compliance and posterior orientation showed the greatest pain relief (up to 81.8% improvement), while lower-compliance subgroups reported 54.2-62.5% improvement ( = 0.021). Objective FPD improved in 67.7% of the 'Posterior + High' group versus 46.7% of the 'Anterior + Low' group ( = 0.043). Gait analysis revealed significant improvements in step length, stance width, single-limb stance, and gait velocity ( < 0.05) among children with baseline pain. Posterior foot loading was prevalent in this cohort, and personalized insole therapy was associated with meaningful improvements in subjective pain reports and quantitative gait parameters. While causality cannot be confirmed by this observational design, the findings suggest that targeted plantar corrections may mitigate growing pains and enhance postural stability.
生长痛影响许多儿童,但其潜在机制尚未完全明确。潜在因素包括解剖结构排列不齐和足部压力分布异常(FPD)。本研究评估了:(1)年龄、性别和利手是否与生长痛强度相关;(2)这些儿童中足部前负荷还是后负荷占主导;(3)定制的足底鞋垫是否能改善主观疼痛以及客观姿势或步态参数。共有647名3至14岁儿童接受了基线稳定测力测试(Freemed平台),并被分类为前负荷者或后负荷者。记录疼痛状态(无、轻度、中度、重度)。为存在明显异常的儿童开具定制鞋垫;178名儿童返回进行随访,其中137名重复进行平台评估,178名接受疼痛重新评估。额外的亚组分析检查了鞋垫依从性(高与低)和步态变化(步长、站立宽度、足前进角、单腿站立、步态速度)。在最初的647名儿童中,87%表现为后向负荷,55%报告有一定程度的疼痛。疼痛强度与年龄、性别或利手之间未发现显著相关性。在178名重新评估的患者中,鞋垫依从性较高且为后向负荷的患者疼痛缓解最为明显(改善高达81.8%),而依从性较低的亚组报告改善率为54.2 - 62.5%(P = 0.021)。“后向 + 高依从性”组中67.7%的儿童客观FPD得到改善,而“前向 + 低依从性”组为46.7%(P = 0.043)。步态分析显示,基线时有疼痛的儿童在步长、站立宽度、单腿站立和步态速度方面有显著改善(P < 0.05)。该队列中后足部负荷普遍存在,个性化鞋垫治疗与主观疼痛报告和定量步态参数的有意义改善相关。虽然此观察性设计无法证实因果关系,但研究结果表明,针对性的足底矫正可能减轻生长痛并增强姿势稳定性。