Effect of Hind- and Fore-Foot Eversion on Positional and Rotational Displacement of the Knee in Standing Posture

Author:

Kim Jae Yi1ORCID,Park So Yeong1,Lee Do Yeon1,Jeong Seong Hoon2,Kim Il Soo1,Lim Seong Hoon34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biomechanics Research and Development Center, Rhin Rehabilitation Hospital, Yongin-si 16864, Republic of Korea

2. Shinsegae I&C AI Lab, Seoul 04529, Republic of Korea

3. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 06591, Republic of Korea

4. CMC Institute for Basic Medical Science, Catholic Medical Center of The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 06591, Republic of Korea

Abstract

We investigated the effects of hindfoot and forefoot eversion on the knee’s positional and rotational displacement, plantar pressure, and foot discomfort in a standing posture, beyond the traditional focus on external knee adduction moments (EKAM) in lateral wedge insoles. Twenty-six healthy participants underwent hindfoot eversion from 0 to 10 degrees in 2-degree increments, and forefoot eversion from 0 degrees to the hindfoot eversion angle in 2-degree increments in a standing posture. At each eversion angle, the knee’s medial displacement, EKAM’s moment arm decrease, plantar pressure changes, and foot discomfort were obtained and compared across varying angles. Both hindfoot-only and entire-foot eversion led to significant medial knee displacement and the EKAM’s moment arm decrease, with more pronounced effects in entire-foot eversion. At each hindfoot eversion angle, increasing forefoot eversion resulted in significant medial knee displacement and EKAM’s moment arm decrease. Lower leg rotations were not significantly affected in hindfoot-only eversion but displayed significant medial tilting and internal rotation in entire-foot eversion at specific combinations. Varying eversion angles significantly influenced the forefoot pressure, with heel pressure remaining unaffected. Notably, the lateral forefoot pressure increased significantly as the forefoot eversion angle increased, particularly at higher hindfoot eversion angles. Foot discomfort increased significantly with higher eversion angles, particularly in entire-foot eversion, and also increased significantly as the forefoot eversion angle increased at higher hindfoot eversion angles. Insole configurations incorporating 6–10 degrees of hindfoot eversion and 40–60% forefoot eversion of the hindfoot angle may offer optimized biomechanical support for knee osteoarthritis patients.

Funder

Small and Medium Business Administration of the Republic of Korea

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

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