Effects of 12 weeks of barefoot running on foot strike patterns, inversion eversion and foot rotation in long-distance runners
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Latorre-Román, Pedro Ángel; García-Pinillos, Felipe; Soto Hermoso, Víctor Manuel; Muñoz Jiménez, MarcosEditorial
Elsevier BV
Materia
Endurance Footwear Kinematics Training Unshod
Date
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Latorre-Rom an PA, Garc ıa-Pinillos F, Soto-Hermoso VM, Mu~noz-Jim enez M. Effects of 12 weeks of barefoot running on foot strike patterns, inversion eversion and foot rotation in long-distance runners. J Sport Health Sci 2019;8:579 84.
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of 12 weeks of barefoot running on foot strike patterns, inversion eversion and
foot rotation in long-distance runners.
Methods: Thirty-one endurance runners with no experience in barefoot running were randomized into a control group and an experimental group
who received barefoot training. At pre-test and post-test, all subjects ran at low and high self-selected speeds on a treadmill. Data were collected
by systematic observation of lateral and back recordings at 240 Hz.
Results: McNemar’s test indicated significant changes (p < 0.05) in the experimental group at both high and low speed running in foot strike patterns,
reducing the percentage of high rearfoot strikers and increasing the number of midfoot strikers. A significant increase (p < 0.05) of external
rotation of the foot and a decrease of inversion occurred at comfortable speed in the experimental group.
Conclusion: Twelve weeks of barefoot running, applied progressively, causes significant changes in foot strike pattern with a tendency toward
midfoot or forefoot strikes, regardless of running speed and significant changes in foot rotation at low speed, while the inversion was reduced in
left foot at low speed with a tendency toward centered strike.