Affiliation:
1. Program in Physical Therapy, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
2. Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
The objective of this study was to examine the effects of diabetes mellitus and peripheral neuropathy (DMPN), limited joint mobility, and weight-bearing on foot and ankle sagittal movements and characterize the foot and ankle position during heel rise.
Methods
Sixty people with DMPN and 22 controls participated. Primary outcomes were foot (forefoot on hindfoot) and ankle (hindfoot on shank) plantar-flexion/dorsiflexion angle during 3 tasks: unilateral heel rise, bilateral heel rise, and non–weight-bearing ankle plantar flexion. A repeated-measures analysis of variance and Fisher exact test were used.
Results
Main effects of task and group were significant, but not the interaction in both foot and ankle plantar flexion. Foot and ankle plantar flexion were less in people with DMPN compared with controls in all tasks. Both DMPN and control groups had significantly less foot and ankle plantar flexion with greater weight-bearing; however, the linear trend across tasks was similar between groups. The DMPN group had a greater percentage of individuals in foot and/or ankle dorsiflexion at peak unilateral heel rise compared with controls, but the foot and ankle position was similar at peak bilateral heel rise between DMPN and control groups.
Conclusion
Foot and ankle plantar flexion is less in people with DMPN. Less plantar flexion in non–weight-bearing suggests that people with DMPN have limited joint mobility. However, peak unilateral and bilateral heel rise is less than the available plantar flexion range of motion measured in non–weight-bearing, indicating that limited joint mobility does not limit heel rise performance. A higher frequency of people with DMPN are in foot and ankle dorsiflexion at peak unilateral heel rise compared with controls, but the position improved with lower weight-bearing.
Impact
Proper resistance should be considered with physical therapist interventions utilizing heel rise because foot and ankle plantar flexion position could be improved by reducing the amount of weight-bearing.
Funder
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation