Plantar Pressure Changes and Their Relationships with Low Back Pain during Pregnancy Using Instrumented Insoles
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Martínez Martí, Fernando; Ocón Hernández, Olga; Martínez García, María Sofía; Torres Ruiz, Francisco De Asís; Martínez Olmos, Antonio; Carvajal Rodríguez, Miguel Ángel; Banqueri Ozáez, Jesús; Palma López, Alberto JoséEditorial
Hindawi
Fecha
2019-02-24Referencia bibliográfica
Martínez-Martí, F., Ocón-Hernández, O., Martínez-García, M. S., Torres-Ruiz, F., Martínez-Olmos, A., Carvajal, M. A., ... & Palma, A. J. (2019). Plantar pressure changes and their relationships with low back pain during pregnancy using instrumented insoles. Journal of Sensors, 2019.
Patrocinador
This work was funded by the Junta de Andalucía (Spain) under Project P10-TIC5997. This project was partially supported by the European Regional Development Funds (ERDF).Resumen
Low back pain affects around 50% of pregnant women and presents significant morbidity and persistence for years in 20% of
postpartum women who report that pain. Numerous studies have documented gait alterations during pregnancy and
postpartum. Therefore, an analysis of the relationship between certain gait parameters and low back pain was attempted using
low-cost validated instrumented insoles. This work presents a longitudinal cohort study carried out during routine gynecological
follow-up visits in the first, second, and third trimesters of pregnancy at an Obstetrics and Gynecology Service. Sample size was
62. Plantar pressure data were collected with specially designed instrumented insoles containing four force sensors to measure
peak pressure, center of pressure, and stance phase time in each foot and in each pregnancy trimester. The analysis was carried
out on a two-dimensional level, simultaneously considering the data from both feet using Hotelling’s T2 test. This longitudinal
study detected relationships between certain gait parameter changes and low back pain during pregnancy. It revealed a cyclic
tendency of low back pain prevalence with a maximum in the second trimester and a decrease in the third trimester, which was
correlated with alterations of the pregnant gait: excessive foot pronation and rearfoot pressure increase.