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- Title
Muscle-Activation Onset Times With Shoes and Foot Orthoses in Participants With Chronic Ankle Instability.
- Authors
Dingenen, Bart; Peeraer, Louis; Deschamps, Kevin; Fieuws, Steffen; Janssens, Luc; Staes, Filip
- Abstract
Context: Participants with chronic ankle instability (CAI) use an altered neuromuscular strategy to shift weight from doublelegged to single-legged stance. Shoes and foot orthoses may influence these muscle-activation patterns. Objective: To evaluate the influence of shoes and foot orthoses on onset times of lower extremity muscle activity in participants with CAI during the transition from double-legged to single-legged stance. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: Musculoskeletal laboratory. Patients or Other Participants: A total of 15 people (9 men, 6 women; age = 21.8 ± 3.0 years, height = 177.7 ± 9.6 cm, mass = 72.0 ± 14.6 kg) who had CAI and wore foot orthoses were recruited. Intervention(s): A transition task from double-legged to single-legged stance was performed with eyes open and with eyes closed. Both limbs were tested in 4 experimental conditions: (1) barefoot (BF), (2) shoes only, (3) shoes with standard foot orthoses, and (4) shoes with custom foot orthoses (SCFO). Main Outcome Measure(s): The onset of activity of 9 lower extremity muscles was recorded using surface electromyography and a single force plate. Results: Based on a full-factorial (condition, region, limb, vision) linear model for repeated measures, we found a condition effect (F3,91.8 = 9.39, P < .001). Differences among experimental conditions did not depend on limb or vision condition. Based on a 2-way (condition, muscle) linear model within each region (ankle, knee, hip), earlier muscle-activation onset times were observed in the SCFO than in the BF condition for the peroneus longus (P < .001), tibialis anterior (P = .003), vastus medialis obliquus (P = .04), and vastus lateralis (P = .005). Furthermore, the peroneus longus was activated earlier in the shoes-only (P = .02) and shoes-with-standard-foot-orthoses (P = .03) conditions than in the BF condition. No differences were observed for the hip muscles. Conclusions: Earlier onset of muscle activity was most apparent in the SCFO condition for ankle and knee muscles but not for hip muscles during the transition from double-legged to single-legged stance. These findings might help clinicians understand how shoes and foot orthoses can influence neuromuscular control in participants with CAI.
- Subjects
ANKLE injuries; ELECTROMYOGRAPHY; JOINT hypermobility; NEUROPHYSIOLOGY; PAIRED comparisons (Mathematics); QUESTIONNAIRES; STATISTICS; T-test (Statistics); DATA analysis; TASK performance; NEUROMUSCULAR system; CONTINUING education units; REPEATED measures design; CROSS-sectional method; DATA analysis software; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; FOOT orthoses
- Publication
Journal of Athletic Training (Allen Press), 2015, Vol 50, Issue 7, p688
- ISSN
1062-6050
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.4085/1062-6050-50.2.02