Mahoney Joseph M, Lista Amy, Carbajal Diego, Infantolino Benjamin W, Altman-Singles Allison R
Mechanical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, Berks College, Reading, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Kinesiology, The Pennsylvania State University, Berks College, Reading, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Sep 24;20(9):e0332616. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0332616. eCollection 2025.
This study evaluated how running with a stroller influences biomechanical parameters commonly associated with injury risk. Specifically, the study investigated changes in vertical and torsional loading and tibial acceleration in runners pushing a jogging stroller compared to running without one. Thirty-eight healthy adult runners participated in trials where they ran over a force plate with and without a stroller. Key measurements included vertical and anterior-posterior ground reaction forces, tibial accelerations, and free moments. The findings demonstrated significant reductions in vertical loading metrics, including vertical impact peak, vertical instantaneous and average loading rates, and vertical impulse, by 8-17% when running with a stroller. These reductions suggest a decreased risk of overuse injuries commonly associated with vertical forces. Conversely, torsional loading parameters, such as peak free moment and free moment impulse, increased significantly, with some measures rising by more than 400%. This increase in torsional loading indicates an elevated risk of stress-related injuries, particularly tibial stress fractures. In addition, tibial acceleration decreased slightly, though to a lesser extent than vertical loading metrics. These results highlight a biomechanical tradeoff when running with a stroller. While the reduction in vertical loading may mitigate the risk of bone stress and overuse injuries, the simultaneous increase in torsional loading could heighten the likelihood of torsional stress injuries. The study underscores the need for further research to explore mitigation strategies, such as optimized stroller designs or alternative pushing techniques, to balance these risks. The findings contribute valuable insights for runners, coaches, and stroller manufacturers aiming to promote safer running practices for caregivers using jogging strollers.
本研究评估了推着婴儿车跑步如何影响通常与受伤风险相关的生物力学参数。具体而言,该研究调查了与不推婴儿车跑步相比,推着慢跑婴儿车的跑步者在垂直和扭转负荷以及胫骨加速度方面的变化。38名健康的成年跑步者参与了试验,他们分别在有和没有婴儿车的情况下在测力板上跑步。关键测量指标包括垂直和前后方向的地面反作用力、胫骨加速度和自由力矩。研究结果表明,推着婴儿车跑步时,垂直负荷指标显著降低,包括垂直冲击峰值、垂直瞬时和平均负荷率以及垂直冲量,降低了8%-17%。这些降低表明与垂直力相关的过度使用损伤风险降低。相反,扭转负荷参数,如峰值自由力矩和自由力矩冲量,显著增加,一些测量值上升超过400%。扭转负荷的增加表明与应力相关的损伤风险升高,尤其是胫骨应力性骨折。此外,胫骨加速度略有下降,但其下降幅度小于垂直负荷指标。这些结果突出了推着婴儿车跑步时的生物力学权衡。虽然垂直负荷的降低可能会减轻骨应力和过度使用损伤的风险,但扭转负荷的同时增加可能会增加扭转应力损伤的可能性。该研究强调需要进一步研究以探索缓解策略,如优化婴儿车设计或替代推法,以平衡这些风险。这些发现为跑步者、教练和婴儿车制造商提供了宝贵的见解,旨在为使用慢跑婴儿车的看护者推广更安全的跑步做法。