Effect of footwear modifications on oscillations at the Achilles tendon during running on a treadmill and over ground: A cross-sectional study

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Abstract

Background: Achilles tendon injuries are known to commonly occur in runners. During running repeated impacts are transferred in axial direction along the lower leg, therefore possibly affecting the oscillation behavior of the Achilles tendon. The purpose of the present study was to explore the effects of different footwear modifications and different ground conditions (over ground versus treadmill) on oscillations at the Achilles tendon. Methods: Oscillations were measured in 20 male runners using two tri-axial accelerometers. Participants ran in three different shoe types on a treadmill and over ground. Data analysis was limited to stance phase and performed in time and frequency space. Statistical comparison was conducted between oscillations in vertical and horizontal direction, between running shoes and between ground conditions (treadmill versus over ground running). Results: Differences in the oscillation behavior could be detected between measurement directions with peak accelerations in the vertical being lower than those in the horizontal direction, p < 0.01. Peak accelerations occurred earlier at the distal accelerometer than at the proximal one, p < 0.01. Average normalized power differed between running shoes (p < 0.01) with harder damping material resulting in higher power values. Little to no power attenuation was found between the two accelerometers. Oscillation behavior of the Achilles tendon is not influenced by ground condition. Conclusion: Differences in shoe configurations may lead to variations in running technique and impact forces and therefore result in alterations of the vibration behavior at the Achilles tendon. The absence of power attenuation may have been caused by either a short distance between the two accelerometers or high stiffness of the tendon. High stiffness of the tendon will lead to complete transmission of the signal along the Achilles tendon and therefore no attenuation occurs.

Figures

  • Table 1. Damping characteristics of shoe conditions used in the present study.
  • Fig 1. Placement of accelerometers. Both sensors were attached to the skin overlaying the Achilles tendon. The proximal accelerometer was located at 36% of tibial length while the distal accelerometer was affixed at 26% of tibial length.
  • Fig 2. Characteristic acceleration signals. Acceleration signals recorded at the Achilles tendon while running on a treadmill shown for one representative subject. Grey lines show the data obtained from each step while black lines depict mean curves, averaged over all steps. ffc occurred at time = 0 ms.
  • Fig 3. Interaction effect of Direction*Configuration. Peak accelerations measured at the Achilles in horizontal and vertical direction. Measurements were performed while running in three different types of footwear.
  • Fig 4. Interaction effect of Location*Direction. ttpeak at different accelerometer locations (proximal and distal) and in different measurement directions.
  • Fig 5. Normalized power spectrum of the distal accelerometer. Average power spectrum for running over ground and running on a treadmill, separated in two measurement directions. Graph a) shows data in the vertical x-direction while graph b) shows data in the horizontal yz-plane. Solid lines indicate mean values of all study participants, dashed lines indicate SDs. Low-frequency and medium-frequency intervals are depicted in the graphs.
  • Fig 6. Normalized power spectrum of the distal acceleration signal in vertical x-direction. Power is averaged over ground conditions (treadmill and over ground) and separately shown for three different running shoe configurations. Low-frequency and medium-frequency intervals are depicted in the graphs.
  • Fig 7. Average normalized power in different frequency intervals. Power was averaged over all subjects and all trials, both accelerometers are included. Bars represent mean values while error bars show SDs. Stars indicate significant differences.

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APA

Meinert, I., Brown, N., & Alt, W. (2016). Effect of footwear modifications on oscillations at the Achilles tendon during running on a treadmill and over ground: A cross-sectional study. PLoS ONE, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152435

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