Well-trained Endurance Runners’ Foot Contact Patterns: Barefoot vs. Shod Condition

Author:

Mosqueira-Ouréns Manuel1,Muñoz-Pérez Iker2,Luis Tuimil José3,Saleta-Cobos Martín4,Varela-Sanz Adrian3

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Physiotherapy, Podiatry and Occupational Therapy, San Antonio Catholic University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain

2. Faculty of Education and Sport Sciences, University of Deusto, Bilbao, Spain

3. Performance and Health Group, Physical and Sports Education Department, Faculty of Sports Sciences and Physical Education, University of A Coruna, A Coruna, Spain

4. Hospital Son Llatzer, Hospital Son Llatzer, Palma de Mallorca, Spain

Abstract

AbstractWe aimed to investigate the initial foot contact and contact time in experienced endurance runners at individualized speeds, in running shoes and barefoot. Forty-eight participants (33.71±7.49 y, 70.94±8.65 kg, 175.07±7.03 cm, maximum aerobic speed 18.41±1.54 km.h-1) were distributed into three groups according to athletic performance: highly-trained runners, middle-trained runners, and control group. An incremental running test until exhaustion was performed for assessing maximum aerobic speed. After≥24 h of recovery participants randomly walked and ran, barefoot and in running shoes, over a pressure plate at ~4.7 km.h-1 and 85% of the maximum aerobic speed, respectively. They wore the same model of running shoes with homogeneous lacing pattern. A rearfoot strike was performed by 68.8% and 77.1% of participants when running barefoot and in running shoes, respectively. Considering the tendency to develop a rearfoot strike was lower in the barefoot condition, runners with higher performance may benefit from training in minimalist running shoes because their foot contact pattern could tend towards a non-rearfoot strike. Our results suggest that initial foot contact and contact time are related to running performance and may also be influenced by running shoes.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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