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The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running

Runners often experience over-use injuries. Ground reaction force (GRFs) patterns have been associated with these over-use injuries; however, it is not solely the magnitude of GRFs, but also the rate at which they are applied that lead to lower extremity injury. Many recreational runners will use ov...

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Autores principales: RUANO, CRYSTAL, POWELL, DOUGLAS, CHALAMBAGA, ELIZABETH T., RENSHAW, DOUG
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Berkeley Electronic Press 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4739487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27182316
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author RUANO, CRYSTAL
POWELL, DOUGLAS
CHALAMBAGA, ELIZABETH T.
RENSHAW, DOUG
author_facet RUANO, CRYSTAL
POWELL, DOUGLAS
CHALAMBAGA, ELIZABETH T.
RENSHAW, DOUG
author_sort RUANO, CRYSTAL
collection PubMed
description Runners often experience over-use injuries. Ground reaction force (GRFs) patterns have been associated with these over-use injuries; however, it is not solely the magnitude of GRFs, but also the rate at which they are applied that lead to lower extremity injury. Many recreational runners will use over-the-counter insoles as a method of treating or preventing injury. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the efficacy of two insoles on peak GRFs and loading rates. It was hypothesized that no differences in peak GRFs or loading rates would exist with the addition of two insoles during running. Twelve subjects (7 females; 5 males) performed seven running trials in each of the following conditions: no insoles (NORM), over-the-counter insoles (OTC) and memory-foam insoles (TEMPUR). GRFs were recorded using a force plate (1440Hz; AMTI) while subjects ran across a 15 meter lab. A 2 x 3 (gender x insole) repeated measures ANOVA was used to compare the effects of insoles on loading rate and ground reaction forces. Alpha level was set at p <0.05. The current study found no statistical differences in loading rate or GRFs between the insole and no insole conditions. Furthermore, there was no gender effect in any condition. The findings of the current study suggest that insoles do not attenuate shock or decrease loading rate. The lack of shock attenuation associated with insoles suggests they do not protect the lower extremity from injury.
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spelling pubmed-47394872016-05-12 The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running RUANO, CRYSTAL POWELL, DOUGLAS CHALAMBAGA, ELIZABETH T. RENSHAW, DOUG Int J Exerc Sci Articles Runners often experience over-use injuries. Ground reaction force (GRFs) patterns have been associated with these over-use injuries; however, it is not solely the magnitude of GRFs, but also the rate at which they are applied that lead to lower extremity injury. Many recreational runners will use over-the-counter insoles as a method of treating or preventing injury. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the efficacy of two insoles on peak GRFs and loading rates. It was hypothesized that no differences in peak GRFs or loading rates would exist with the addition of two insoles during running. Twelve subjects (7 females; 5 males) performed seven running trials in each of the following conditions: no insoles (NORM), over-the-counter insoles (OTC) and memory-foam insoles (TEMPUR). GRFs were recorded using a force plate (1440Hz; AMTI) while subjects ran across a 15 meter lab. A 2 x 3 (gender x insole) repeated measures ANOVA was used to compare the effects of insoles on loading rate and ground reaction forces. Alpha level was set at p <0.05. The current study found no statistical differences in loading rate or GRFs between the insole and no insole conditions. Furthermore, there was no gender effect in any condition. The findings of the current study suggest that insoles do not attenuate shock or decrease loading rate. The lack of shock attenuation associated with insoles suggests they do not protect the lower extremity from injury. Berkeley Electronic Press 2009-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4739487/ /pubmed/27182316 Text en
spellingShingle Articles
RUANO, CRYSTAL
POWELL, DOUGLAS
CHALAMBAGA, ELIZABETH T.
RENSHAW, DOUG
The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running
title The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running
title_full The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running
title_fullStr The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running
title_short The Effects of Tempur Insoles on Ground Reaction Forces and Loading Rates in Running
title_sort effects of tempur insoles on ground reaction forces and loading rates in running
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4739487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27182316
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