| Literature DB >> 25884982 |
Yaodong Gu1, Qichang Mei1, Justin Fernandez2, Jianshe Li1, Xuejun Ren3, Neng Feng4.
Abstract
The custom of bound feet among Chinese women has existed for almost a century. This practice has influenced the daily life of Chinese women, especially during everyday locomotion. The primary aim of this study is to analyze the loading patterns of bound feet. Specifically, the plantar pressure and center of pressure were analyzed for peak pressure, contact area, force time integral, center of pressure displacement velocity and trajectory in the anterior-posterior direction via a comparison with normal feet. The key outcomes from this work were that the forefoot and rearfoot of bound feet bear the whole loading during stance phase. The center of pressure displacement velocity of bound feet was also greatly reduced with the shortening of trajectories. This suggests that the proprioceptive system adjusts motor function to adapt to new loading patterns while maintaining locomotive stability. A biomechanical understanding of bound feet may assist with prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of bound feet disorders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25884982 PMCID: PMC4401540 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0121695
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The basic information of participants with bound feet and normal feet.
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| 92.7±1.5 | 86.7±0.6 | 0.184 |
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| 152.6±1.3 | 156.5±1.5 | 0.939 |
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| 48.7±3.3 20.89±1.06 | 53.8±2.8 21.92±0.7 | 0.774 0.687 |
SD: standard deviation.
Fig 1The morphology of bound feet (left: bottom view; right: medial view, the two red lines are the loading parts of bound feet during locomotion.)
Fig 2The center of pressure (CoP) trajectory of bound feet (left) and normal feet (right) (ICP represents Initial Contact Phase, FFCP represents Forefoot Contact Phase, FFP represents Flat Foot Phase and FFPOP represents Forefoot Push Off Phase; the circle indicates the location of CoP while stance phase.)
Fig 3A. The peak pressure of bound and normal feet in different anatomical parts (* indicates that significance exists between bound and normal feet, p<0.05.).
B. The contact area of bound and normal feet in different anatomical parts (* indicates significance exists between bound and normal feet, p<0.05.). C. The force time integral (impulse) of bound feet and normal feet in different anatomical parts (* indicates significance between bound and normal feet, p<0.05.).
The CoP progression velocity in anterior-posterior direction and stance time.
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| 156.6±27.5 | 0.8±0.12 | 15.36±1.78 | |
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| 205.9±12.1 | 0.79±0.05 | 25.82±3.65 | |
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| p = 0.96 |
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Note: * indicates that there is a significant difference.