| Literature DB >> 31700547 |
Julia L Jacobs1, Sarah T Ridge1, Dustin A Bruening1, K Annie Brewerton1, Jayson R Gifford1, Daniel M Hoopes2, A Wayne Johnson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blood flow is essential in maintaining tissue health. Thus, compromised blood flow can prevent tissue healing. An adducted hallux, as seen inside a narrow shoe, may put passive tension on the abductor hallucis, compressing the lateral plantar artery into the calcaneus and restricting blood flow. The purposes of this study were to compare lateral plantar artery blood flow before and after passive hallux adduction and to compare blood flow with arch height.Entities:
Keywords: Hallux valgus; Narrow footwear; Plantar fascia; Plantar fasciitis; Vascular ultrasound, low arch
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31700547 PMCID: PMC6829837 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-019-0361-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Fig. 1a) The position of the L8-18i transducer recording a longitudinal image of the lateral plantar artery. Images were taken deep to abductor hallucis. b) The lateral plantar artery diameter was measured at the widest part of the artery from one tunica intima to the other as indicated on this image by the dotted vertical line
Fig. 2Ultrasound imaging protocol. Longitudinal images were taken in triplex mode (B-mode, color flow and pulse-wave modes) to obtain blood velocity. Transverse images were taken in B-mode to obtain vessel diameter measurements
Fig. 3Photographs of each subject’s foot were taken at rest (left photo) and during both of the adducted hallux phases (center and right photos) of the ultrasound protocol. First metatarsophalangeal joint angles were then measured using Dartfish software
Fig. 4Baseline (BL) blood flow, overall postadduction (PATotal) blood flow, average blood flow over the 5 cardiac cycles immediately following passive hallux adduction (PAImmediate) blood flow, and average blood flow over the 5 cardiac cycles at the end of passive hallux adduction (PADelayed) blood flow. Black dotted line crossing the center of the x-axis indicates the point of passive hallux adduction
Demographic characteristics with mean (SD)
| Overall | |
|---|---|
| Age (year) | 24.8 (6.8) |
| Height (m) | 1.73 (0.10) |
| Weight (kg) | 73.4 (13.46) |
| Foot Length (cm) | 25.2 (1.78) |
| AHI | 0.372 (0.34) |
| Low Arch | 0.341 (0.006) |
| Mid-range Arch | 0.368 (0.005) |
| High Arch | 0.407 (0.004) |
| Resting Toe Angle | 16.1° (4.8) |
| Adducted Toe Angle | 28.7° (4.4) |
| Toe Angle Change | 12.7° (3.7) |
| Heart Rate | 62.8 (8.8) |
Fig. 5Blood flow before and after passive hallux adduction (top). Log transformed blood flow before and after passive hallux adduction (bottom). Dotted lines crossing the center of the x-axis indicate initial adduction of the hallux. Error bars show standard error
Fig. 6There were 29 subjects with an overall decrease in blood flow after passive hallux adduction (gray dashed line); 16 subjects had an overall increase in blood flow after passive hallux adduction (black solid line). Blood flow is represented by the 42 cardiac cycles before passive hallux adduction and 46 cardiac cycles during passive hallux adduction. Dotted black line crossing the center of the x-axis indicates the start of passive hallux adduction