| Literature DB >> 35434618 |
Ayano Yamada-Yanagawa1, Shun Sasagawa2, Kimitaka Nakazawa1, Naokata Ishii1.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of occasional and habitual wearing of high-heeled shoes on static balance in young women. Groups of habitual high-heel wearers and non-wearers (n = 7 in both groups) were asked to stand quietly on a force platform without shoes (WS condition) or with high heels (heel area 1 cm2, heel height 7 cm) (HH condition). During the trials, the center-of-pressure (CoP) position in the anterior-posterior direction was measured, and its root mean square (as a measure of postural sway magnitude, CoPRMS) and mean velocity (as a measure of regulatory activity, CoPMV) were calculated. To further examine the effect of high-heel wearing on the temporal aspects of slow and fast processes in static balance, the CoP sway was decomposed into low- (below 0.5 Hz) and high- (above 0.5 Hz) frequency components, and then spectral analysis was performed. Results showed that the CoPRMS was not significantly different between the groups or between the shoe conditions, indicating that wearing high heels with a heel height of 7 cm did not increase the magnitude of postural sway, irrespective of high-heel experience. The CoPMV was significantly larger in the HH condition than in the WS condition, whereas it was not significantly different between the groups. This result indicates that wearing high heels increased the amount of regulatory activity in both habitual wearers and non-wearers. The spectral analysis further showed that habitual high-heel wearers showed significantly decreased rate of regulatory activity than non-wearers, both while standing with and without high heels. These results suggest that use-dependent changes in static balance control are evident in both high-heeled and without shoes conditions.Entities:
Keywords: center-of-pressure (CoP); high-heeled shoes; postural control; quiet standing; women
Year: 2022 PMID: 35434618 PMCID: PMC9006774 DOI: 10.3389/fspor.2022.760991
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Sports Act Living ISSN: 2624-9367
Figure 1A side view of the custom-made high-heeled shoe (heel area 1 cm2, heel height 7 cm). The shoe had two adjustable straps with Velcro fasteners around the ankle and the dorsum of the foot.
Figure 2Representative recordings of the CoP sway for one high-heel wearer (left) and one non-wearer (right) in the WS (A) and HH (B) conditions. (A) Overall excursion of the CoP showed no difference between the two participants, whereas fast ripples were more prominent in the CoP recordings for the wearer. (B) Fast ripples were observed in the recordings for both the wearer and non-wearer, and no apparent differences were observed between the two participants.
Figure 3The CoPRMS (top) and CoPMV (bottom) for each group and each test condition. The white bar indicates the WS condition and the gray bar indicates the HH condition. The small dots represent data for individual participants. ***P < 0.001 between the test conditions.
Figure 4Representative examples of the CoP (thin gray line) and CoPLF (bold black line) recordings (left) and corresponding CoPHF recordings (right) for one non-wearer in the WS (A) and HH (B) conditions.
Figure 5The MPF of CoPHF (top) and CoPLF (bottom) for each group and each test condition. The white bar indicates the WS condition and the gray bar indicates the HH condition. The small dots represent data for individual participants.†P < 0.05 between the groups.