Oscar Pistorius……..here on Inspirational Sundays on The Gait Guys.
Feet Suffer for High Heel Fashion→
/From the article,
“The big problem created by wearing high-heel shoes was abnormal weight distribution, she said. Instead of the foot bearing the weight of the body in the heel and the ball of the foot, all the weight fell on to the ball of the foot when wearing high heels, especially narrow, pointy-toed shoes. The increased pressure could make corns and callouses develop on the ball of the foot, increase the likelihood of developing ingrown toenails, bunions and hammertoes and contribute to neuroma, a painful thickening of the nerve between the toe bones. In some habitual heel wearers the calf and Achilles muscles could shorten into a tighter position leading to strain and an increased risk of tendonitis or tendon rupture when reverting to walking in a flat shoe or barefoot. Foot problems typically started to present for women in their 40s, with pain limiting their ability to function, she said. "Most foot conditions are chronic and develop over a period of time,” Professor Bower said. As we age our joints, ligaments and tendons loosen and the foot will lengthen slightly and incrementally because it is no longer toned. The fat pad under the heel and ball of the foot that cushions the foot from birth declines and the bones and joints become more prominent. The older foot, with less naturally occurring support and padding, was therefore at an increased risk of problems from wearing high heels, she said. “
It is all stuff most of us have heard already, but it is always nice to hear it again and pass it onto our patients and children.
High heels and women in them are great to look at, but just not meant to walk in for any extended period of time. The Gait Guys say, "Put them on your fireplace mantle where you can enjoy them daily, rather than on your foot.”
Ivo and Shawn, The Gait Guys
Friday follies….. not exactly gait related. Not sure if we shared this one in the past but its worth it to enjoy a second time !
We can put some “alternative” exercise stuff up once in awhile can’t we ?
we almost wet ourselves on this one….. sledgewand ! Snakeshaker ! Pink socks !
Rock on Ben, rock on dude !
Enjoy
Cross over line running. One "easy Fix" trick The Gait Guys use.
/Here is a little trick we use with our runners…… stop running on the track in your lane between the lines…… start running ON the lane line….. put your body over the lane line but do not let your feet touch the line……run on either side. You will feel choppy at the start but you should feel how much more glute and abdominal use and support you need. Start with 20-40 meter runs and build up. Once you are good at it, you can run anywhere and just imagine the line !
How a really fast runner could potentially be faster, and less injured. A 2nd look at the amazing runner, Lauren Fleshman.
Here, as promised, we take a closer look at talented runner Lauren Fleshman from our 11/22 post. Remember, we are not being critical,
our posts are never meant to be critical or inflammatory, only calling things the way we see them from the information we can glean from the videos we see or that you send. Remember, our dialogue is rarely from hands on clinical examination to prove that what we see is factual and not an assumptive compensation pattern that is so often seen on video (we have mentioned this on many older posts). Yes, video analysis shows compensations, as you see here with Lauren. What you see is often not what you get, but it is critical information that helps drive a logical path towards educated assumptions that can help lead to an accurate diagnosis. The two Gait Guys, with nearly 4 decades of clinical experience, have done the ground work necessary to make many of the assumptions we make. But we are not always right, so take our posts as solid, experienced and quite often research-backed learning information, and get to see a skilled gait neuromuscular specialist like us to pound out the definitive diagnosis.
We believe Lauren could run faster. Here we offer our experienced thoughts on what we did to help athletes with mechanics just like hers. After perusing Lauren’s blog and looking at the history of her injuries (namely navicular stress injurires, and hip problems) our post from Tuesday Nov 22 seems pretty “crystal ball” spot on.
Lets go back to the video and watch the right foot strike from:01-:02 (yes, you will need to stop the video and start again a few times. What do you see? A right foot coming down to the ground in inversion viewed as a sharply pitched lateral foot strike. This is brought on largely by her troubled mechanics of a cross over gait but it can also be due to internal tibial torsion and a forefoot varus, as they often occur together and may be part of her clinical picture. Immediately on strike you see the midfoot collapse and the foot abduct (progression angle increases) BUT the knee holds steady, due to her most excellent glute max strength. This sudden midfoot pronatory collapse and the sudden violent abduction of the forefoot will force the navicular bone medially (adduction and medial rotation to be exact) and is very suspect to her navicular injuries in the past. Fixing the cross over biomechanics will have a huge impact on reversing the sudden and aberrant loading of the medial foot anatomy.
Now watch at :03-:11; the left foot. What do you see? An adductory twist of the heel. Thomas Michaud calls this an “abductory twist” in his landmark book “Foot Orthosis” but we are talking about the same phenomenon here, it just depends on your point of reference. Our reference is the heel moving medially, or adducting as you see here in Lauren’s video, so we will use the term “Adductory twist” at least in this post. Lauren’s adduction heel twist is greater on the left than right and occurs with and MORE apparent pronation. According to one interview we watched (link click), she has had multiple stress fractures on this left foot. Hmmm… Looks to us like she could have some mild bilateral internal tibial torsion (knees point in when the the feet are straight; notice how the Left knee looks straighter and the right is always pointing externally; :06-:14) and possibly some mildly increased tibial varum on the left. Perhaps she has a Right short leg, possibly functionally short as opposed to anatomic, and this can come from asymmetrically impaired hip rotation mechanics. Her injury history is suspect. This seems supported by the subtle Right torso lean (:16-:22) and Left hip hike you see during Right stance phase (:22). A functionally longer leg, more varum, more visible pronation, internal tibial torsion: it adds up to a stiffer lower extremity which would absorb more force. We wonder which Nikes she runs in….
So, what to do?
We can’t change her torsion or tibial varum if they in fact exists, examination is always conclusive, not video clips (unless you have seen the movie “Gattica” then fixing them is a distinct possibility).
If she does have a Right short leg, we could lift it, beginning with 2mm sole lift. But we would have to prove that it is anatomically short first. Regardless, sometimes temporary use of a sole lift helps restore some symmetry. It it is functionally short, from impaired hip rotation for example, we could start there with short term help of a lift. But, remember, if you can resolve the functional pathology, use the lift like an orthotic should be used. Meaning, a therapy device to temporarily help someone achieve proper skill, endurance and strength (our mantra) so that the device can be weaned out of.
We could work on her suspect forefoot varus (if it exists, it is nearly impossible to tell for sure in a video clip with shoes on), by increasing mobility of her 1st ray (see our Video here ) but we would first fix these cross over gait mechanics with these video skills (click here) and then see how much varus is expressing itself as pathologic mechanics.
Her chiropractor seems to be doing a great job maintaining mobility. It would be great to look at her intrinsic muscles of the foot; we suspect she has a weak EHB (extensor hallucis brevis) if a forefoot varus is present, among other things.. We have seen photos of her feet on her great blog and she is getting alot of distal callus formation on her toes (if that was in fact her foot) so we suspect she is over dominant in the long toe flexors (which pairs up nicely with weak EDB and EHB). This might suggest further intrinsic foot muscle weakness, examination muscle testing would be necessary of course.
Those are some ideas of places to start. Stabilize the foot from below and hip from above and something better has to come out of this. If we knew more, we could give you more. If you know her, have her drop us a line or head to her blog and suggest she peak at our work. We would love to help this truly amazing runner. We love to see great athletes perform at the top level. Mostly because we are in awe and jealous of what they can do and what we cannot do, and more so because we always wonder if what we are good at will make them faster. It is what we do.
* A big thanks goes out to Lauren and Nike for posting this video and for being a good sport (we hope) about our evaluations. Thanks for being such a great athlete and for being slightly less than perfect. There is nothing to learn from being perfect and no room for becoming greater at your craft. No one wants to take their medicine when it tastes baldly, and so we work on staying healthier. Only from suffering the humblings that come from the watchful scrutiny of being one of the best can we become aware of our flaws and triumph over them.
The Gait Guys…two foot geeks promoting foot and gait education. No gait is safe….
Ivo and Shawn
Ramblings that go on inside the heads of The Gait Guys.
/Random thoughts on gait (and other) motor patterns …….
It is quite possible and reasonable to assume that a motor pattern is a natural mechanism for joint and multi-joint protection. Consciously trying to alter a motor pattern is likely to drive an improper pattern or one that is deemed unstable by the brain.
Scenario: client has right foot spun externally into the frontal plane by 15 degrees more than the opposite side.
In this scenario, this could be the reason why merely attempting to turn inwards a right foot that has drifted its way in time outwards does not hold even though it is clearly a deviation from symmetry. It is likely the fact that the brain, in such a scenario, has calculated that there is not sufficient stability in a more neutral symmetrical foot progression angle and thus has found the necessary stability in a more turned out position. As we have always said, subconsciously turning the foot outwards helps to cheat into the frontal plane, likely because that plane is less stable with a neutral foot and with the foot “kickstand” turned out, stability is achieved. Thus, engaging the foot better in that plane gives the brain and body the perceived and actual stability that it feels it needs to more naturally provide joint or multi-joint stability. That is not say this is optimal biomechanically for best-case function, but in this picture with all the parts assembled in their present functional ability, this is the optimal pattern. It is however fraught with risks and probable consequences, and these are what may play out in time to develop into an injury. It is safe to say that the central nervous system (brain etc) will only allow one to place the body and its limbs into positions of perceived stability. We say “perceived” because there are parameters that can fool the brain. For example, the peripheral neuropathy numbness and loss of proprioception from advancing diabetes can lead to faulty input from the peripheral sensory receptors thus procuring a miscalculated decending motor pattern, and possible placement of the limb in a less than optimal position. Do not be mistaken, the brain thinks this is an optimal limb placement, but it does not know it did so on faulty sensory information. The brain assumes that the information is accurate. This is why you see such horrible fragmented unstable and waivering gait in advancing diabetics. Their feet can get so numb that there is simply insufficient sensory information to develop any semblance of a clean gait motor pattern. The same goes with an ACL deficient knee. The ACL is a major proprioceptor, a major driver of joint position sense. It is not nearly as detrimental to the motor pattern as advanced peripheral neuropathies but it has a similar effect, just muted. And in many cases this can be worse. In a high level athlete, this possible lack of obvious awareness of key proprioception / joint position sense can let the athlete get into a potentially dangerous loading position where the joint is at higher risk. Where as a full blown neuropathy patient knows that such a task is impossible.
Just some random thoughts…….. internal cortical ramblings of gait crazed madness.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone !
Shawn and Ivo
Is this the perfect running shoe ?→
/We were recently asked by Kara Thom to write a brief description of the perfect running shoe. For 20 years Kara has been writing about running and triathlons while pursuing the sports herself. She is the author of Hot (Sweaty) Mamas: Five Secrets to Life as a Fit Mom (Andrews McMeel, 2011), Becoming an Ironman: First Encounters with the Ultimate Endurance Event (Breakaway Books, 2001), and the children’s book, See Mom Run (Breakaway Books, 2003). She is also a Runner’s World reporter.
* Embedded in her article is our description of “the Perfect Shoe”. Enjoy her great piece.
Ivo and Shawn
Don’t let the title scare you. While watching this excerpt from an acupuncture lecture, think about the implications for gait.
In this installment of Neuromechanics weekly, we discuss how everything we do, smell, see or hear influences muscle tone through the cerebellum. The take home message is environmental cues as well as therapeutic ones will influence muscle tone via the muscle spindles..
You just can’t get away from neurology. It is EVERYWHERE!
Gait Video Analysis: Olympian Carl Lewis.
Carl Lewis: arguably one of the great runners of the 20th century, especially in form.
Today we are going to use this video to look at a few specific components.
First, lets compare his front on technique to Lauren’s from yesterday. Notice the total lack of limb cross over? Lauren showed almost a “running on a line” where as Carl is running on two lines. This requires more gluteal strength, and if you can get to a position to train it you can make it stronger. You will also notice that with Carl’s reduced cross over the tibia are vertical and the degree of foot pronation is minimized thus affording less time in the dampening pronation contact phase in comparison to Lauren.
Now lets talk about the gluteus maximus for a minute. The function of the G.Maximus is multifactorial. The G.Max is mostly silent at low activity levels such as level and uphill walking, but it increases substantially in activity and alters its timing with respect to speed during running.
The G.Max controls trunk flexion on the stance-side and it contracts in the late swing phase (when the leg is finishing it’s swing in front of our body) through early stance phase to decelerate hip flexion and initiate hip extension. There is lessening gluteal contraction at toe off but the medial bundle (more sacral divisions) offer a brief burst of force. So, if you look at its activity levels and the timing of them, you will get the distinct sense that the gluteus maximus function is to pull the leg through hip extension. The key word here is PULL. Remember, the foot is fixed to the ground in the stance phase. So as the glute fires in the early half of stance phase, when the hip is still in relative flexion, it pulls us through the stance phase thus driving us forward. Mind you, the core must be strong enough to hold the pelvis static so that the extension can occur through the hip and not travel upwards to create lumbar extension. You can get a great sense of this in Carl Lewis’ video above. Many people see the G.Max as a push off muscle but this is not true. It is more of a pull muscle, pulling us forward on the ground as opposed to pushing us forward .
Want to do some precision work to focus on the feeling of the glutes “pulling you through”, then try some hip-glute extension pull throughs (click) with a cable crossover on the bottom setting or heavy kettlebell or sandbag swings (click). Best of all to get the feel of what the glute max does …… grab a skateboard and plant one foot on the board and begin pulling yourself through the stance phase with the leg…..after all that is what you are doing, pulling yourself through. Of course form is everything, so be careful and focus on slow movements that are clean and precise. Just do one thing when you do either of these. Feel the foot contact and imagine the hips and glutes driving forward on a stiff protected core while you feel the posterior drive through the foot. This is likely the feeling Carl would be aware of in his feet at the 10-15 second mark in the video.
Some readers will jump at the opportunity to say “hey, Carl is a sprinter, Lauren is a distance runner…… you cannot compare apples and oranges !" Our response here is , yes that is correct. But they are not that different, look at the kick in the end of close a distance race…..are they really that much different ?" But what we really need to say here on that question is, "That was not the point of this exercise. We are looking at flaws here." If we asked Lauren to sprint, we would see the same pattern as in her video here.
Shawn and Ivo………. just a couple of nerds always wondering why everyone else is in the box and we are standing outside of it. It’s not fair.
The Cross Over gait in a professional runner.
This is Lauren Fleshman (born September 26, 1981) is an American track and field athlete. She was the U.S. 5000 meters champion in 2006 and 2010. In the 5000 meter final of the 2011 IAAF World Championships[1] she finished 7th place, equaling the highest ever finish by an American woman in that event. She debuted in the Marathon November 6, 2011 at the ING New York City Marathon, finishing 12th. She currently trains in Eugene, Oregon as part of the Nike funded professional team Oregon Track Club Elite.
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What the Gait Guys have to say. First of all, this isn’t meant to pick on Lauren, we are big fans of hers. Her amazing numbers are evidence of her dominance. We still think her best days are yet to come, and we hope this offers a means to such an end.
This is a great video depicting what often happens at the foot level because of the angle of impact in the cross over gait. Maybe she should watch our 3 Part series on Cross Over Gait (here is Part 1,click). With all that excessive pronation at the foot we suspect there is more gas in the tank in this already amazing runner. What we like is that at the pelvis level (relatively, she has a small hike on the L during R stance phase; look at :22) it is apparent that she has sufficient abdominals (particularly obliques) and gluteus medius strength to avoid the contralateral hip drop during single leg stance (the gluteus medius and gluteus minimus function together to pull the thigh away from midline, or “abduct” the thigh. During gait, these two muscles function principally in supporting the body on one leg, in conjunction with the tensor fascia lata/TFL-ITB, to prevent the pelvis from dropping to the opposite side).
The video also shows no evidence of frontal plane pelvis shifting (see our 3 part videos) which are often seen in the cross over gait and the knees are not giving into the valgus stress created at the ankle from her collapse. So our question is, why doesn’t she get out of this power-leak style so she can be even faster? Sure you could argue, as many do, that if it ain’t broken don’t fix it but from our perspective why not make it better?
Her foot pronation is clearly excessive from driving her power down through an angled tibia instead of driving down through a vertical tibia. This angle of attack is obvious, look at the significal lateral foot initial contact, her foot motion is lateral to medial, not sagittally forward. She is wasting energy because her foot is spending more time moving lateral to medial than forward. She is plenty strong, as evidence by the knee not passing midline into valgus (the glutes are not only extenders but external rotators). She does have one heck of an abductory twist (watch that rear foot at heel rise, yikes! We wonder if her achilles are sore after a long run!). This is surely limiting her gluteal availability. This is just not efficient biomechanics. The longer the foot has to pronate the less time it has to supinate. Our greatest power is in push off from a fully supinated rigid lever foot, not one that is still coming out of pronation. Remember, the glute is going to power through that foot, why not get it positioned optimally do take the glute on and utilize the glute as much as possible ?
In time it could catch up to her in the form of injury, we certainly hope not. We realize this is already a champion runner, she has the numbers to prove it, but why not do what is necessary to become untouchable ? We hear it all the time, “I am injury free, why should I address it?”. Our answer might be, “then why bother doing routine car maintenance if it is running fine or yearly blood work if you feel fine ?" Why do you think NASCAR pit teams and mechanics do all the work they do ? Because they want to go faster. This is such a simple fix. We think she could be so much faster.
Tomorrow we will show a video of Carl Lewis, arguably one of the great runners of the 20th century, especially in form. You will not see a step out of place let alone a cross over. So we will see you tomorrow for that piece.
Bottom line … . Our guess is that the main reason Lauren has not fixed her cross over is that no one has brought it to her attention … until now. In a future post, we will discuss some possible fixes as well.
The Gait Guys ….. Just two guys not trying to upset anyone, just trying to share what we know, what we do everyday, making fast people … faster.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone……. from us both……. Shawn & Ivo
Gait Analysis of Lead Pack at 2011 New York City Marathon
Here is a piece (link here) we did for the great guys over at The Natural Running Center.
The Natural Running Center asked us — The Gait Guys – to comment on this striking photo of the lead male pack that was taken at the recent NYC Marathon (with the beautiful Manhattan skyline in the background). We, as always, were glad to oblige. Please keep in mind, we were sent a still photograph that was taken only from the side, and had no video to analyze so there is much information missing; thus some assumptions are a given. To simplify matters for readers, we dispensed with names.
Let’s start with Mr. Hat at the rear of the pack. He appears to be at the toe off phase of running gait, the late stance phase of gait. Fatigue may be setting in. He appears to have insufficient hip extension, as the thigh is flexed (as is the knee) and he is leaning back at the upper torso and is in neck extension. This could be from fatigued abdominals, but he could be trying to expand his ribs and chest wall to get more oxygen. This is not a good strategy but who are we to pick on a guy who can keep up with gazelles. The angle of his swing or float phase thigh is also a little low, again a possible product of fatiguing abdominals, but it could be merely because he is just beginning forward swing. Remember, this is a snapshot in time, these ranges may improve at a 100th second subsequent frame. You also get a peek at his left calf (medial gastroc, actually, behind the right foot) and it looks pretty contracted. Judging from his great toe extension, he is using that torso extension to pull him through the stride.
Next we have Mr. Blue Shorts I, immediately in front of Mr Hat. He looks like a heel striker in this frame with that limb out in front of his body. Note that right shoulder coming forward and torso twist to propel him through. He even flexes his neck and rounds his shoulders; probably to try and ventilate for all that ATP expenditure. Form is often loss with fatigue; we all know that.
Now onto Mr. Black Shorts, the shortest runner in the lead pack. He appears to have some really nice hip extension happening, or is it? Actually, if you look carefully, the extension is occurring at his lumbar spine, and his hip extension is close to 0 degrees…far from the 15-30 we would like to see. The shadow on the back of his shirt makes this hard to see. Check out that right shoulder. See how far it is cocked into extension behind him? Driving a strong posterior arm swing will help extend the opposite hip, an attempt to make up for any power leaks in hip extension. He appears to be another heel striker as well.
Next up is Mr. Orange Singlet in his orange Nikes. This gentleman, and pack leader Mr. Red (yes, it’s a Mutai, but not the one who won!)) seem to have the most promise and cleanest strides in this still photo. Mr. Orange Singlet has good forward lean, nice thigh flexion and adequate hip extension; his body is lined up during toe off from the foot to the top of the head. He is using that medial gastroc muscle on the left. He also appears to be the most relaxed of the bunch.
Mr. Red appears to be a forefoot striker, and he may hit at or just in front of his center of mass. He has good hip extension as well (maybe he is copying Mr. Orange, or is it the other way around? They do appear to be looking at one another). He has some torso rotation to the right (look at that shoulder), and has a cross body arm swing but that could also be from the neurologic reflex of turning the head to the right to check out the competition.
It would be great to see some video of these gents to see if our hypotheses were correct. Good biomechanics and form do not necessarily equate to winning, but they do improve efficiency and we like to think they prevent (or minimize) injuries. Don’t get us wrong, these guys are the pros. These are the guys we all strive (and dream) to become as runners.
Their apparent “snapshot” flaws are either minor for them given their physical capacities, a product of fatigue in a race where they are running each mile faster than many can ride a bike, or they have simply grooved their dysfunctional patterns. That does not mean that what we have talked about are not power leaks for these guys; elite runners can almost always improve some aspect of their form. But hey, we would settle any day for 26 miles at a sub-5 minute pace.
Do not ever forget that running is a skill and an art form. The more miles you do, the more video you watch, the more you practice the fundamental skills as you build endurance and strength, the better you can tap into optimal biomechanics. Simply running without constant mindfulness on every step often yields faltering mechanics into your weaknesses and habits. Sure, we would all love to look like these guys when we run, but not many of us do. But then again, how many of us amateur runners are putting in the miles and time that they do? According to Malcolm Gladwells book, “Outliers” and Daniel Coyle’s book, ‘The Talent Code”, most of us have not done the 10,000-15,000+ hours necessary to become masters at this craft.
Respectfully, we are The Gait Guys. Two aging bald foot geeks, helping humanity, one gait cycle at a time.
Pictured in the photo:
3 Geoffrey Mutai 2:05:06 Kenya KEN
2 Emmanuel Mutai 2:06:28 Kenya KEN
4 Tsegaye Kebede 2:07:14 Ethiopia ETH
1 Gebre Gebremariam 2:08:00 Ethiopia ETH
6 Jaouad Gharib 2:08:26 Morocco MAR
14 Abdellah Falil 2:10:35 Morocco MAR
Running is the new currency. Not the US dollar, not the EURO, not gold bars or silver coins. RUNNING.
Welcome to Friday Follies.
What an awful ploy……. using an ice cream truck on those poor pre-diabetic kids. They likely stopped off at the local Lactose Intollerant Clinic too ! hehe
(is that kid hurling at the end ?)
Shift Happens: From The Gait Guys perspective: Rebuilding Sidney Crosby’s Brain.
As we have discussed before, three systems keep us upright in the gravitational plane so that we can walk, run, skate (in Sidney’s case) and ambulate correctly and efficiently:
- The vestibular system (inner ear)
- vision and our proprioceptive system (joint and muscle mechanoreceptors).
- and our proprioceptive system (joint and muscle mechanoreceptors)
When one of these systems fails or is impaired, the delicate balance between these 3 systems is interrupted and shift happens; our balance and coordination fail and we fall.
This stresses the point that gait and locomotion are as much a central nervous system phenomenon as a peripheral one. The processes really cannot be separated. Thankfully, we and in this case Sidney Crosby and many others, have physicians like Dr Carrick to assist people in correcting these imbalances. Dr Ivo and Dr Allen were fortunate enough to study under Dr Carrick and his programs. We try to slip in some of this information on a weekly basis into The Gait Guys blogs, to help you understand the human machine a little better and to also allow you to appreciate the complexity, precision and essential requirements of human movement such as walking gait, running and yes, even skating.
Enjoy the full article link (HERE) about the fascinating and ongoing rehabilitation of Sidney Crosby of the NHL.
Ivo and Shawn…….. two guys pretty crummy on two steel blades (even though one grew up in Canada).
full article:
http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/11/03/rebuilding-crosbys-brain/
Smart Shoes?
Well, we thought we had seen it all.
Imagine a shoe that tells you what the competition is doing. Next, it tells you how you are doing in comparison to them? Sounds like the future? Guess again…
Enter the Adidias Brainy Boot. The latest in the stealth weaponry in the competition for being the worlds greatest soccer shoe for 2 huge giants, Nike and Adidas. REad all about it on Bloomberg….
Now if they could just design a shoe that gave you the biomechanics you needed….
Ivo and Shawn…The Gait Guys
Hoping to see these puppies at the Austin event..
The Gait Guys and Shoe Fit. Coming to your neighbourhood store soon !→
/Begin looking for certifications in early 2012. Contact thegaitguys@gmail.com for more information. Look out for more from The Gait Guys in upcoming issues of Triathlete.
Thanks to the great editor at Triathlete magazine……. Jene Shaw
Shawn and Ivo
Neurodevelopment of the barefoot brain: or What would happen to our hand function if we wore OVEN MITTS all day long ? and so then, what about the effect of shoes on feet ?
Cody Lundin … perhaps the best known barefoot dude you will ever meet. If you have seen his TV show Dual Survival on Discovery Channel with Dave Canterberry you will know that he has been in the snows of Alaska, on the hot sand deserts, swamps etc you name it, barefoot on each. Take a good look at the photo of his strong healthy feet, no hammer toes, no bunions, no undercurling of the 4-5th toes (lateral quadratus plantae weakness) etc.
He is … Cody Lundin, Aboriginal Living Skills School, LLC
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Brief dialogue from Cody…..(yes, those are his feet in the picture)
“Feets…
I have received many comments over the years - positive and negative - about going barefoot. The reasons I do so are varied, and for those who know me, they know I have no agenda wishing that others would walk barefoot too. Its worthy to note that hundreds of thousands of people around the world - from toddlers to grandmothers - walk barefoot, and certainly, even though primitive foot wear was common, all of our ancestors got their start sans footwear. Foot wear certainly has its place to protect from environmental extremes, yet often its a conformist sign of class, status, or culture. I have traveled to many places in the world barefoot, and the reactions have been interesting; from getting kicked out of the airport in Peru, to boarding several airplanes in Laos where i wasn’t given a second glance. To each their own! cody ”
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What The Gait Guys have to say:
Stepping backwards in time a little, in the caveman days things were different. The foot was unshod (without shoes) from the moment of the first step until one’s dying day, and thus the foot developed and looked different. The sole of the foot was thicker and callused due to the constant contact with rough and offending surfaces thus preventing skin penetration, the foot proper was more muscular and it may have been wider in the forefoot and the toes were likely slightly separated due to the demands of gripping which would obviously necessitate increase muscular strength and bulk to the foot intrinsic muscles. It was the constant input of uneven and offending surfaces such as rocks, twigs, mud, foliage and debris that stimulated the bottom of the foot, and thus the intrinsic muscles, sensing joint positions and relaying those variations to the brain for corresponding descending motor changes and adaptations to maintain protection and balance. The foot simply worked different, it worked better, it worked more like the engineering marvel that it truly is. The foot was uncovered and the surfaces we walked on were uneven and challenging. However, as time went on, man decided to mess with a good thing. He took a foot that was highly sensitive, a virtual sensory organ with a significant sensory and motor representation in the brain (only the hands, genitals and face have more brain representation as represented by the sensory and motor homunculus of the brain) and he not only covered it up with a slab of leather or rubber but he then flattened and then paved not only his world, but also his home, with black hard top, cement, wood or tile thus completing the total sensory information deprivation of the entire foot. Thus, not only did he take away critical adaptive skills from himself and generations to follow, but he began the deprivation of the brain of critical information from which the central nervous system would need to develop and continue to function effectively. It is not unlikely that the man of pre-shod time had a strong competent foot arch (perhaps somewhat flat to increase surface area contact for adaptation), but one that did not need orthotics, stability shoes or rigid shanks and inserts. In other words, the foot and its lower limb muscles were strong with exceptional skills and endurance. But in todayís day and time things are now different. We now affix a shoe to the childís foot even before he can walk and then when he does, all propriosensory information necessary for the development of critical spinal and central nervous system reflexes is ensured to be virtually absent. Is it any wonder why there are so many people in chronic pain from postural disorders related to central core weakness and inhibition ? Is it any wonder why so many people seem to have flat incompetent feet and arches? Man has done it to himself, but thankfully man has proven that what he can do, he can undo. Thankfully we see modern medical research that has delved into this realm of thought and has uncovered the woes of our ways and to follow, companies like those mentioned earlier are imagining and developing devices that will allow us some protection from modern day offenses such as glass, plastics and metal and thus allow us the slow and gradual return to our healthier foot days, all fashion sense aside.
*Some hard and simple research facts, current research has been conducted showing that plantar (bottom of the foot) sensory feedback plays a central role in safe and effective locomotion, that more shoe cushioning can lead to higher impact forces on the joints and higher risk of injury, that unshod (without shoes) lowers contact time versus shod running, that there are higher braking and pushing impulses in shod versus unshod running, that unshod running presents a reduction of impact peak force that would reduce the high mechanical stress that occurs during repetitive running and that the unshod foot induces a neural-mechanical adaptation which could enhance the storage and restitution of elastic energy at ankle extensor level. These are only some of the research findings but they are some of the more significant ones. These issues will not only support injury management benefits for the unshod runner but increase speed, force and power output.
Shawn and Ivo……. The Gait Guys