| Literature DB >> 26011042 |
Karsten Hollander1, Andreas Argubi-Wollesen2, Rüdiger Reer1, Astrid Zech3.
Abstract
Possible benefits of barefoot running have been widely discussed in recent years. Uncertainty exists about which footwear strategy adequately simulates barefoot running kinematics. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of athletic footwear with different minimalist strategies on running kinematics. Thirty-five distance runners (22 males, 13 females, 27.9 ± 6.2 years, 179.2 ± 8.4 cm, 73.4 ± 12.1 kg, 24.9 ± 10.9 km x week(-1)) performed a treadmill protocol at three running velocities (2.22, 2.78 and 3.33 m x s(-1)) using four footwear conditions: barefoot, uncushioned minimalist shoes, cushioned minimalist shoes, and standard running shoes. 3D kinematic analysis was performed to determine ankle and knee angles at initial foot-ground contact, rate of rear-foot strikes, stride frequency and step length. Ankle angle at foot strike, step length and stride frequency were significantly influenced by footwear conditions (p<0.001) at all running velocities. Posthoc pairwise comparisons showed significant differences (p<0.001) between running barefoot and all shod situations as well as between the uncushioned minimalistic shoe and both cushioned shoe conditions. The rate of rear-foot strikes was lowest during barefoot running (58.6% at 3.33 m x s(-1)), followed by running with uncushioned minimalist shoes (62.9%), cushioned minimalist (88.6%) and standard shoes (94.3%). Aside from showing the influence of shod conditions on running kinematics, this study helps to elucidate differences between footwear marked as minimalist shoes and their ability to mimic barefoot running adequately. These findings have implications on the use of footwear applied in future research debating the topic of barefoot or minimalist shoe running.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26011042 PMCID: PMC4444250 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0125880
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Shoe conditions.
(top image = Asics GT-2160, center image = Nike free 3.0, lower image = Leguano).
Group mean (SD) temporal-spatial and kinematic parameters for 2.22, 2.78 and 3.33 m.s-1.
| Barefoot | Uncushioned minimalist shoe | Cushioned minimalist shoe | Standard running shoe | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Ankle angle at footstrike (°) | 6.90 (5.95) | 8.69 (6.12) | 11.66 (4.88) | 11.14 (4.16) |
| Knee angle at footstrike (°) | 10.77 (5.26) | 10.53 (4.71) | 10.07 (4.24) | 10.02 (4.51) |
| Stride frequency (steps.minute-1) | 160.87 (5.46) | 158.14 (6.06) | 155.70 (7.78) | 154.47 (5.14) |
| Step length (cm) | 82.98 (2.82) | 84.44 (3.25) | 85.80 (3.83) | 86.41 (2.92) |
| Rate of rear-foot strikes (%) | 62.9 | 74.3 | 90.0 | 94.3 |
|
| ||||
| Ankle angle at footstrike (°) | 5.70 (6.46) | 7.39 (6.19) | 11.57 (4.74) | 11.33 (4.24) |
| Knee angle at footstrike (°) | 9.77 (6.99) | 10.83 (4.48) | 10.27 (5.26) | 10.65 (5.24) |
| Stride frequency (steps.minute-1) | 167.09 (8.18) | 164.36 (7.44) | 161.68 (7.52) | 158.68 (5.98) |
| Step length (cm) | 99.98 (4.91) | 101.61 (4.60) | 103.30 (4.85) | 105.18 (3.96) |
| Rate of rear-foot strikes (%) | 55.7 | 68.6 | 92.9 | 94.3 |
|
| ||||
| Ankle angle at footstrike (°) | 4.68 (7.23) | 6.40 (6.80) | 10.56 (5.23) | 11.85 (4.12) |
| Knee angle at footstrike (°) | 12.56 (5.73) | 12.52 (5.27) | 12.03 (5.16) | 11.40 (4.89) |
| Stride frequency (steps.minute-1) | 174.85 (9.90) | 170.80 (8.52) | 168.60 (8.43) | 164.84 (7.44) |
| Step length (cm) | 114.74 (6.37) | 117.38 (5.83) | 118.92 (5.93) | 118.15 (6.37) |
| Rate of rear-foot strikes (%) | 58.6 | 62.9 | 88.6 | 94.3 |
SD standard deviation
Mixed model effects (p-values) for included factors.
| Footwear | Running Velocity | Leg side | Footwear* Velocity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ankle angle at footstrike (°) | <.001 | .001 | .699 | .026 |
| Knee angle at footstrike (°) | .239 | <.001 | .157 | .285 |
| Stride frequency (steps.minute-1) | <.001 | <.001 | .611 | <.001 |
| Step length (cm) | <.001 | <.001 | .622 | <.001 |
Differences (95% CI) and p-values of pairwise comparisons between footwear conditions.
| Ankle angle at footstrike (°) | Knee angle at footstrike (°) | Stride frequency (steps.minute-1) | Step length (cm) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diff. (CI) | P-value | Cohen’s d | Diff. (CI) | P-value | Cohen’s d | Diff. (CI) | P-value | Cohen’s d | Diff. (CI) | P-value | Cohen’s d | |
| Barefoot vs Standard running shoe | -5.68 (-6.426; -4.935) | <.001 | -1.032 | .346 (-.319; 1.010) | .308 | .062 | 8.275 (7.624; 8.926) | <.001 | .945 | -5,156 (-5,586;-4,726) | <.001 | -.357 |
| Barefoot vs Uncushioned minimalist shoe | -1.73 (-2.479;-.988) | <.001 | -.946 | -.258 (-.923; .407) | .446 | .045 | 3.171 (2.520; 3.823) | <.001 | .589 | -1,910 (-2,340; -1,480) | <.001 | -.244 |
| Barefoot vs cushioned minimalist shoe | -5.52 (-6.267;-4.772) | <.001 | -.461 | .310 (-.357; .976) | .362 | -.047 | 5.613 (4.962; 6.264) | <.001 | .337 | -3,442 (-3,872; -3,013) | <.001 | -.136 |
| Uncushioned minimalist shoe vs cushioned minimalist shoe | -3.79 (-4.534;-3.039) | <.001 | -.464 | .568 (-.098; 1.235) | .095 | .103 | 2.441 (1.790; 3.093) | <.001 | .268 | -1,532 (-1,962; -1,103) | <.001 | -.107 |
| Uncushioned minimalist shoe vs standard running shoe | -3.95 (-4.692;-3.201) | <.001 | -.527 | .604 (-.061; 1.268) | .075 | .123 | 5.104 (4.452; 5.755) | <.001 | .615 | -3,246 (-3,676;-2,816) | <.001 | -.222 |
| Cushioned minimalist shoe vs standard running shoe | -.16 (-.908;.587) | .674 | -.037 | .036 (-.631; .702) | .917 | .019 | 2.662 (2.011; 3.313) | <.001 | .317 | -1,714 (-2,143; -1,284) | <.001 | -.117 |