4.6 Article

Foot strike determines the center of pressure behavior and affects impact severity in heel-toe running

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 808-820

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2021.2019991

Keywords

Biomechanics; footfall; footwear; tibial acceleration; loading

Categories

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund
  2. Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek [FWO.3F0.2015.0048.01]

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This study assessed the behavior of the center of pressure (COP) and its relationship with impact severity during heel-toe running in athletic footwear. The study found that the location of the COP at foot strike is associated with the vertical loading rate and peak tibial accelerations. A more anterior foot strike was associated with higher peak tibial accelerations and greater impact severity.
This study assessed the centre of pressure (COP) behaviour and the relationship with impact severity during heel-toe running in conventional athletic footwear. We hypothesized that the COP behaviour depends on its location at foot strike, which would be associated with the vertical loading rate and peak tibial accelerations in heel-toe running. Ground reaction force and tibial acceleration were measured in 104 distance runners running level at similar to 3.2 m/s. High-speed plantar pressure captured at high temporal resolution (500 Hz) and spatial resolution (7.62 . 5.08 mm/sensor) allowed for localization of the COP directly in the footprint during running in self-selected athletic footwear. More lateral X-coordinates of the COP at first foot contact had, in general, more anterior Y-coordinates (adj.R-2 :0.609). In heel-toe running, a more anterior foot strike had a greater refined strike index, which was associated with a quicker roll-over in the rearfoot zone. This strike index contributed to greater maximum vertical loading rates (R-2:0.121), and greater axial (R-2:0.047) and resultant (R-2:0.247) peak tibial accelerations. These findings indicate that (1) the COP progression is dependend on the COP location at foot strike; (2) more anterior rearfoot strikes are more likely to have greater impact severity than posterior rearfoot strikes. [GRAPHICS] .

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