Some Fat on Flat FeetNormal feet:
more hindfoot dorsiflexion (read ankle rocker)
hindfoot more flexible
no or different compensation, if any
Symptomatic Flat feet:
less hindfoot dorsiflexion (read, reduced ankle rocker)
hindfoot was more everted, bu…

Some Fat on Flat Feet

Normal feet:

  • more hindfoot dorsiflexion (read ankle rocker)
  • hindfoot more flexible
  • no or different compensation, if any


Symptomatic Flat feet:

  • less hindfoot dorsiflexion (read, reduced ankle rocker)
  • hindfoot was more everted, but less flexible.
  • forefoot compensates for reduced motion in rearfoot by increasing motion 
  • hallux hypermobility
  • symptomatic flat feet lacked positive joint energy for propulsion 


Asymptomatic flat feet:

  • less hindfoot dorsiflexion (read, reduced ankle rocker)
  • hindfoot was more everted, but less flexible.
  • forefoot compensates for reduced motion in rearfoot by increasing motion 
  • hallux hypermobility
  • asymptomatic flat feet needed to absorb more negative ankle joint energy during loading response. This may risk fatigue and overuse syndrome of anterior shank muscles


“Hence, despite a lack of symptoms flatfoot deformity in asymptomatic flat feet affected function. Yet, contrary to what was expected, symptomatic flat feet did not show greater deviations in 3D foot kinematics than asymptomatic. Symptoms may rather depend on tissue wear and subjective pain thresholds.”


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23796513

Podcast 78: Step Width Gait, Training Asymmetries & more

Show sponsors: 

www.newbalancechicago.com

www.lemsshoes.com

A. Link to our server: 

http://traffic.libsyn.com/thegaitguys/pod_78ff.mp3

Direct Download: 

http://thegaitguys.libsyn.com/podcast-78

B. iTunes link:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-gait-guys-podcast/id559864138

C. Gait Guys online /download store (National Shoe Fit Certification and more !) :

http://store.payloadz.com/results/results.aspx?m=80204

D. other web based Gait Guys lectures:

www.onlinece.com   type in Dr. Waerlop or Dr. Allen,  ”Biomechanics”

______________

Today’s Show notes:

24-year-old woman missing entire cerebellum exemplifies the amazing power of brain plasticity

Brain scans reveal ‘gray matter’ differences in media multitaskers

Who are we: Ivo talk a bit about yourself and your educational history and what is your website ?
Shawn…..do the same
and……lets keep each interesting but to just a few minutes
Effect of step width manipulation on tibial stress during running
Does Limited Internal Femoral Rotation Increase Peak Anterior Cruciate Ligament Strain During a Simulated Pivot Landing?
http://ajs.sagepub.com/content/early/2014/09/22/0363546514549446.abstract
Quadriceps Muscle Function After Exercise in Men and Women With a History of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
http://natajournals.com/doi/abs/10.4085/1062-6050-49.3.46
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Part 2: “Standing on Glass” Static Foot/Pedograph Assessment

* note (see warning at bottom): This is a static assessment dialogue. One cannot, and must not, make clinical decisions from a static assessment. The right and left sides are indicated by the R and L circled in pink. There are 4 photos here today.

Blue lines: Last time we evaluated possible ideas on the ORANGE lines here, it would be to your advantage to start there. 

We can see a few noteworthy things here in these photos. We have contrast-adjusted the photo so the pressure areas (BLUE) are more clearly noted. There appears to be more forefoot pressure on the right foot (the right foot is on the readers left), and more rearfoot pressure on the left (not only compare the whiteness factor but look at the displacement of the calcaneal fat pad (pink brackets). There is also noticeably more lateral forefoot pressure on the left. There is also more 3-5 hammering/flexion dominance pressure on the left.  The metatarsal fat pad positioning (LIME DOTS represent the distal boundary) is intimately tied in with the proper lumbrical muscle function  (link) and migrates forward toward the toes when the flexors/extensors and lumbricals are imbalanced. We can see this fat pad shift here (LIME DOTS). The 3-5 toes are clearly hammering via flexor dominance (LIME ARROWS), this is easily noted by visual absence of the toe shafts, we only see the toe pads. Now if you remember your anatomy, the long flexors of the toes (FDL) come across the foot at an angle (see photo). It is a major function of the lateral head of the Quadratus plantae (LQP) to reorient the pull of those lesser toe flexors to pull more towards the heel rather than on an angle. One can see that in the pressure photos that this muscle may be suspicious of weakness because the toes are crammed together and moving towards the big toe because of the change in FDL pull vector (YELLOW LINES). They are especially crowding out the 2nd toe as one can see, but this can also be from weakness in the big toe, a topic for another time. One can easily see that these component weaknesses have allowed the metatarsal fat pad to migrate forward. All of this, plus the lateral shift weight bearing has widened the forefoot on the left, go ahead, measure it. So, is this person merely weight bearing laterally because they are supinating ? Well, if you read yesterday’s blog post we postulated thoughts on this foot possibly being the pronated one because of its increased heel-toe and heel-ball length. So which is it ? A pronated yet lateral weight bearing foot  or a normal foot with more lateral weight bearing because of the local foot weaknesses we just discussed ? Or is it something else ? Is the problem higher up, meaning, are they left lateral weight bearing shift because of a left drifted pelvis from weak glute medius/abdominal obliques ?  Only a competent clinical examination will enlighten us.

Is the compensation top-down or bottom up, or both in a feedback cycle trying to find sufficient stability and mobility ? These are all viable possibilities and you must have these things flowing freely through your head during the clinical examination as you rule in/rule out your hands-on findings.  Remember, just going by a screen to drive prescription exercises from what you see on the movement screen is not going to necessarily fix the problem, it could in fact lead one to drive a deeper compensation pattern. 

Remember this critical fact.  After an injury or a long standing problem, muscles and motor patterns jobs are to stabilize and manage loads (stability and mobility) for adequate and necessary movement. Injuries leave a mark on the system as a whole because adaptation was necessary during the initial healing phase. This usually spills over during the early movement re-introduction phase, particularly if movement is reintroduced too early or too aggressively.  Plasticity is the culprit. Just because the injury has come and gone does not mean that new patterns of skill, endurance, strength (S.E.S -our favorite mnemonic), stability and mobility were not subsequently built onto the apparently trivial remnants of the injury.  There is nothing trivial if it is abnormal. The forces must, and will, play out somewhere in the body and this is often where pain or injury occurs but it is rarely where the underlying problem lives.

Come back tomorrow.  We will try to bring this whole thing together, but remember, it will just be a theory for without an exam one cannot prove which issues are true culprits and which are compensations. Remember, what you see is often the compensatory illusion, it is the person moving with the parts that are working and compensating not the parts that are on vacation.  See you tomorrow friends !

Shawn and ivo, the gait guys

* note: This is a static assessment dialogue. One cannot, and must not, make clinical decisions from a static assessment. As in all assessments, information is taken in, digested and then MUST be confirmed, denied and/or at the very least, folded into a functional and clinically relevant assessment of the client before the findings are accepted, dismissed and acted upon. As we always say, a gait analysis or static pedograph-type assessment (standing force plate) is never enough to make decisions on treatment to resolve problems and injuries. What is seen and represented on either are the client’s strategies around clinical problems or compensations.  Today’s photo and blog post are an exercise in critical clinical thinking to get the juices flowing and to get the observer thinking about the client’s presentation and to help open up the field to questions the observer should be entertaining.  The big questions should be, “why do i see this, what could be causing these observances ?”right foot supinated ? or more rear and lateral foot……avoiding pronation ?

The “Standing on Glass” Static Foot/Pedograph Assessment: Part 1
* note: This is a static assessment dialogue. One cannot, and must not, make clinical decisions from a static assessment. As in all assessments, information is taken in, di…

The “Standing on Glass” Static Foot/Pedograph Assessment: Part 1

* note: This is a static assessment dialogue. One cannot, and must not, make clinical decisions from a static assessment. As in all assessments, information is taken in, digested and them MUST be confirmed, denied and/or at the very least, folded into a functional and clinically relevant assessment of the client before the findings are accepted, dismissed and acted upon. As we always say, a gait analysis or pedograph-type assessment is never enough to make decisions on treatment to resolve problems and injuries. What is seen and represented on either are the client’s strategies around clinical problems or compensations.  Today’s photo and blog post are an exercise in critical clinical thinking to get the juices flowing and to get the observer thinking about the client’s presentation and to help open up the field to questions the observer should be entertaining.  The big questions should be, “why do i see this, what could be causing these observances ?”

* note the right and left sides by the R and L circled in pink.

ORANGE lines: The right foot appears to be shorter, or is it that the left is longer (see the lines and arrows drawing your attention to these differences)? A shorter foot could be represented by a supinated foot (if you raise the arch via the windlass mechanism you will shorten the foot distance between the rear and forefoot). A longer foot could be represented by a more pronated foot.  Is that what we have here ? There is no way to know, this is a static presentation of a client standing on glass. What we should remember is that the goal is always to get the pelvis square and level.  If an anatomically or functionally short leg is present, the short leg side MAY supinate to raise the mortise and somewhat lengthen the leg.  In that same client, they may try to meet the process part way by pronating the other foot to functionally “shorten” that leg.  Is that what is happening here ? So, does this client have a shorter right leg ? Longer left ?  Do you see a plunking down heavily onto the right foot in gait ? Remember, what you see is their compensation.  Perhaps the right foot is supinating, and thus working harder at the bottom end of the limb (via more supination), to make up for a weak right glute failing to eccentrically control the internal spin of the leg during stance phase ? OR, perhaps the left foot is pronating more to drive more internal rotation on the left limb because there is a restricted left internal hip rotation from the top ? Is the compensation top-down or bottom up ? These are all viable possibilities and you must have these things flowing freely through your head during the clinical examination as you rule in/rule out your hands-on findings.  Remember, just going by a FMS-type screen to drive prescription exercises from what you see on a movement screen is not going to necessarily fix the problem, it could in fact lead one to drive a deeper compensation pattern. You can be sure that Gray Cook’s turbo charged brain is juggling all of these issues (and more !) when he sees a screen impairment, although we are not speaking for him here.

Remember this critical fact.  After an injury or a long standing problem, muscles and motor patterns jobs are to stabilize and manage loads (stability and mobility) for adequate and necessary movement. Injuries leave a mark on the system as a whole because adaptation was necessary during the initial healing phase. This usually spills over during the early movement re-introduction phase, particularly if movement is reintroduced too early or too aggressively.  Plasticity is the culprit. Just because the injury has come and gone does not mean that new patterns of skill, endurance, strength (S.E.S -our favorite mnemonic), stability and mobility were not subsequently built onto the apparently trivial remnants of the injury.  There is nothing trivial if it is abnormal. The forces must, and will, play out somewhere in the body and this is often where pain or injury occurs but it is rarely where the underlying problem lives.

Come back tomorrow, where we will open your mind into the yellow, pink, blue and lime markings on the photo. Are the hammering toes (lime) on the left a clue ? How about the width of the feet (yellow) ? The posturing differences of the 5th toe to the lateral foot border ?  What about the static plantar pressure differences from side to side (blue)? Maybe, just maybe, we can bring a logical clinical assumption together and then a few clinical exam methods to confirm or dis-confirm our working diagnostic assumption.  See you tomorrow friends !

Shawn and ivo, the gait guys

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Whoa!  It is amazing what the human frame can withstand…

This 300 pound individual is retired from working with tow trucks from a towing company as well as a service station.   He believes working with the tow trucks, particularly jumping out of them contributed to the O.A. of the ankles.

He has osteoarthritic ankles, a rear foot varus of 15 degrees left side, 5 degrees right.  He is currently in the New Balance 1040 shoe.  He would like some new orthotics built. He Fowler tests positive on his current orthotic set up (with the foot on the ground, dorsiflex the foot at the 1st metatarsal phalangeal joint (ie big toe joint), simulating terminal stance; the orthotic should hug the arch through the range of motion; ie about 45-60 degress of great toe dorsiflexion, which he incredibly has). He is unable to one leg stand because of the O.A. on the ankles and pain.

He has bi-lat. internal tibial torsion, Left > Right and moderate tibial varum, L > R. He has very little internal rotation of the hips bi-lat. Ankle dorsiflexion is about 5 degrees bilaterally.

He is currently in an older New Balance motion control shoe. You can see how he has worn the shoes into varus. More neutral shoes hurt his feet; attempts to put his rear foot into valgus causes increased ankle pain. Exercise compliance is minimal.

WHAT WOULD YOU DO?

The Gait Guys. Teaching and educating with each post.

Shoe lacing problems, things you need to know (that you don't).

How you lace your shoes does truly matter (according to this study).
We have talked about shoe lacing on more than one occasion. Everyone has played around with different laces and lacing strategies at one time or another. And, every shoe seems to lace just a little differently. Some shoes lace far into the forefoot, some have the potential to lace high up into the ankle.  But just because there are eyelets there, doesn’t mean  you have to thread a lace through the hole. It is about fit the majority of the time.  Some of our runners will use “skip” lacing to avoid pressure over the dorsum of the foot, especially if they have a saddle exostosis or hot tendon in that area, much of the time this works to alleviate the pain and pressure there. Just remember, impaired ankle rocker often via weakness of the anterior compartment muscles (toe extensors, tibialis anterior, peroneus tertius) will force dorsiflexion moments into the midfoot and can cause some joint-related compressive pressure on the dorsal foot which can seemingly (and mistakenly) come from shoes tied too tight across the top of the foot. Be sure to consider this fact before you “skip lace” your shoes, it is a big player, one we see all of the time.
In today’s journal article found below, we discover some other factors in a controlled study.  Here they look into the effects of lacing on biomechanics in running, specifically rearfoot runners. The results of the study showed reduced loading rates and pronation velocities as well as lowest peak pressures under the heel and lateral midfoot in the tightest and highest laced shoes. Whereas, the lower laced shoes resulted in lower impacts and lower peak pressures under the 3rd and 4th metatarsal heads (they proposed that this was from forward foot slide in the shoe because of this lacing). The study authors concluded 

 A firm foot-to-shoe coupling with higher lacing leads to a more effective use of running shoe features and is likely to reduce the risk of lower limb injury.

Remember, this is just data for you to cogitate over. It can help you work through some possible issues with your feet and your sport, however it does not translate to everyone as a standard protocol. Remember this, we have been known to say, “your problem is not often the shoe, it is the thing in the shoe (you and your faulty biomechanics)”. However, blaming your problems on you is not good shoe manufacturer advertising, so many shoe companies will offer a plethora of shoes choices for you to accommodate to your variables. This does not necessarily mean the problem is solved, rather it is often managed by a “better” shoe choice that seems to work for your variables. This is a good thing most of the time, if you understand shoes, shoe anatomy, and human anatomy (foot types) so that you can pair them up for a best outcome. The problem may lie in the fact that your shoe fitter is not likely to have all of the necessary pieces to put your perfectly matched picture together, including understanding your total body biomechanics and possibly understanding why a weak glute is impairing hip extension and thus limiting ankle rocker motion, causing premature heel rise, and thus forcing too much dorsiflexion into the arch of the foot and premature forefoot loading causing what seems to be too tightly tied shoes.  
What we truly need an e-Harmony for matching shoes and feet ! But since that perfect scenario doesn’t often exist at the shoe store level or gait analysis level, here at The Gait Guys we have put together the next best thing, The National Shoe Fit Certification Program if you care to take this all to the next level. 
Shoe fitting is an art, and lacing is just another paint brush you can  use to get the job done. You just have to know what brush to use for each given piece of art (ie. the athlete). 
Shawn and Ivo, The gait guys
J Sports Sci. 2009 Feb 1;27(3):267-75. doi: 10.1080/02640410802482425.

Effects of different shoe-lacing patterns on the biomechanics of running shoes.

 

Does this guy have a short leg or what? How good are your eyes?

One again, we had the gait cam, investigating gait on the east coast. What do we see in this gent?

  • heel strike on out side of left foot with increased progression angle

he appears to be stabilizing the left side during stance phase. notice the upper torso shift to the left during left stance phase

  • abbreviated arm swing on right

note that ankle rocker is adequate on the left

  • body lean to right on right stance phase

gluteus medius weakness on right? short leg on right?

Good.

  • Did you also notice the loss of ankle rocker on the right, compared to the left? This results in less hip extension on that side as well.
  • He flexes his right thigh less than his right during pre swing and swing

external obliques should be firing to initiate hip flexion, perpetuated by the psoas, iliacus and rectus femoris. This does not appear to be happening.

All of this is great BUT nothing like being able to actually examine your patients is there? You can see how gait analysis can tell us many things, but they need to be confirmed by a physical exam.

The Gait Guys. Educating (and hopefully enlightening) with each post. Keep your eyes open and your thinking from the ground up : )



Got Arm Swing?

We have written many times about arm swing. Click here for some of our posts here on Tumblr.

Here we are again at the beach. Look at the beautiful difference in arm swing from side to side in the guy carrying the bag. Makes you want to tell him to use a backpack, eh?

Never mind what it does to his gait

  • decreased arm swing on the carrying side
  • increased step length on the left side
  • increased thigh flexion of the left side
  • increased body lean and head tilt to right side (Take a look at this paper)

think about the increased metabolic cost. Think about what this  type of input (increased amplitude of movement unilaterally) is doing to your cortex!

keep your movements symmetrical, folks!

The Gait Guys

A profound loss of hip extension…

While sitting on the beach, our mind never rests. Even when on vacation we continue to watch how people move.

Luckily today, I had the gait cam (Dr Allen is holding down the Gait Guys Fort), so live from Sunset Beach, it’s Sunday night. See of you can see what I saw.

Sitting with my wife and watching the kids dig in the sand, this gal with the flexed posture caught my eye.

Why is she so flexed forward? The profound loss of hip extension made it impossible for her to stand up straight! It was difficult to say if she has bilateral hip osteoarthritis, or possible bilateral THR’s (total hip replacements), maybe just really tight hip flexors, painful bunions that do not like toe off, or even all of the above. She may have a leg length discrepancy, as she leans to the left on left stance phase; of course she could have weak hip abductors on the left. It does not appear she has good control of her core.

What do we see?

  • flexion at the waist
  • loss of hip extension
  • body lean to left at left midstance
  • shortened step length
  • loss of ankle rocker
  • premature heel rise
  • decreased arm swing (she is carrying something in her left hand)

No one is safe from the gait cam! Stay tuned for more beach footage this week!

We remain, The Gait Guys, even on vacation.

Podcast 77: Gait analysis, Forefoot Running & more.

Plus, the 5 neurologic gait compensation expressions.

*Show sponsor: www.newbalancechicago.com

A. Link to our server: 

http://traffic.libsyn.com/thegaitguys/pod_77final.mp3

Direct Download: 

http://thegaitguys.libsyn.com/podcast-77

B. iTunes link:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-gait-guys-podcast/id559864138

C. Gait Guys online /download store (National Shoe Fit Certification and more !) :

http://store.payloadz.com/results/results.aspx?m=80204

D. other web based Gait Guys lectures:

www.onlinece.com   type in Dr. Waerlop or Dr. Allen,  ”Biomechanics”

______________

Today’s Show notes:

Google X acquires ‘tremor-canceling spoon’ startup
http://venturebeat.com/2014/09/10/google-x-acquires-tremor-canceling-spoon-startup/

The 5 expressions of neurologic gait decomposition,
Last week we did an online teleseminar … . .
An acoustic startle alters knee joint stiffness and neuromuscular control
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/sms.12315/abstract
Effectiveness of Off-the-Shelf, Extra-Depth Footwear in Reducing Foot Pain in Older People: A Randomized Controlled Trial
http://biomedgerontology.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/09/08/gerona.glu169.abstract
reader:
I really appreciate learning from you!! I have a bit of a loaded question that I will try to explain clearly to the best of my ability. About 2 years ago, I broke my left shin (hairline-fibula) in a MMA fight. After it healed, a few things have been happening that I assume are connected but can’t quite put my finger on. My ankle mobility on my left ankle is worse than my left. I seem to have permanent turf toe as well. My right glute, ham, and erector are hyperactive.
Additionally, many times when sprinting, pushing a sled, etc, my right quad will become fatigued much more than my left. I believe it’s because I’m not fully extending my left ankle, and relying on my right leg more. Whenever I squat or deadlift, I feel similar too. The right glute and erectors get much more of a “pump” than my left. With all of this, is there anything you would recommend? I truly appreciate it!! It is very frustrating. Thank you again!


People tend to forget about the peroneal muscles. This is what it looks like when the brain forgets.

This client came to see us for obvious reasons but the case details are not what we are focusing on today. Gait gets pretty messed up when a critical component or phase is lost or forgotten.  

In last weeks teleseminar on www.onlineCE.com we discussed several gait cases. In these cases 5 things kept coming up when it came to looking at (specifically) neurologic gait compensations:

  1. slowing of gait
  2. wider based gait
  3. increased ancillary movements 
  4. utilizing support when needed or available
  5. shorted step length and stride length

In this video, it is clear that this person has some serious neurologic problems engaging the peroneal muscles and controlling ankle and foot function and as a consequence you see evidence of some of the itemized issues above, namely, calculated movements, nearly zero arm swing and step length from left to right is abbreviated. 

It can go both ways. The neurologic problem can affect one’s gait, but one’s resultant gait can then affect cortical function, driving an endless loop. Recently, five studies presented at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Vancouver Canada provided striking evidence that when a person’s walk gets slower or becomes more variable or less controlled, his cognitive function is also suffering.(2)  

A person’s gait and their neurologic function cannot be separated. The stuff just run’s too deep.  This is why we love gait so much, because to fully understanding someone’s clinical problems we must understand how and why they move.  There are clues in everyone’s gait that can help you clinically. The question is, will you notice them ? Do you know what normal gait is to begin with ? Will you understand what you are seeing and realize it is a compensation? Will you fix what you see or look deeper to find the cause of what you see ? 

Shawn and Ivo,

The Gait Guys

Gait Posture. 2013 Jul;38(3):549-51. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2013.02.008. Epub 2013 Mar 11.

Altered gait termination strategies following a concussion.

Buckley TA1, Munkasy BATapia-Lovler TGWikstrom EA.

2.  http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/17/health/research/signs-of-cognitive-decline-and-alzheimers-are-seen-in-gait.html?_r=1&

This is part 2 of a 2 part post; with the video from the case previously discussed

please note the following in the video:

  • body lean to left during left stance phase (to clear right longer leg)
  • circumduction of right lower extremity  (to clear right longer leg)
  • lack of arm swing bilaterally (cortical involvement)
  • patient looking down while walking (decomposition of gait)
  • shortened step length (decomposition of gait)
  • increased tibial varum bilaterally

ASSESSMENT:  This patient’s short leg and internal tibial torsion impediments to her full recovery. She has increased tibial varum noted which is complicating the picture. This is causing pathomechanics and an abductory moment not only at the knee but also in the lumbar, thoracic and cervical spines.

WHAT DID WE DO?:                    

  • We attempted to do the one leg standing exercise. She needed to hold on and did not feel stable on the left hip while performing this.  This is probably more of confidence rather than ability issue. 
  • We gave her the stand/sit exercise to try to improve gluteal recruitment.
  • We also gave her the lift/spread/reach exercise to attempt to strengthen her feet.
  • A full-length 5 mm lift was cut for the left shoe  She felt more stable when walking on this.
  • She was treated with IC, PIR and manipulative therapy and neuromuscular stim of the knee as well as left hip area above, below and at the joint line of the knee as well as gluteus medius and minimus.   
  • We may need to consider building a more aggressive orthotic with a forefoot varus post depending upon her progress and response to care  

 The Gait Guys. Making it real, each and every post here on the blog.

special thanks to SZ for allowing us to publish her case, so others can learn

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Wow! What would you do?

This is part 1 of a 2 part post. Look for the other one a few minutes after this one with a video up top for the conclusion

PRESENTING PROBLEM: This 54 YO female patient presents with with left sided knee pain.  She had a total knee replacement (TKR) done in 2011.  She’s had a significant amount of discomfort on the medial aspect of the knee since then. She had an MRI of the hip done thinking the problem was there, and found nothing.   She is walking with a bad limp, left leg is half inch shorter than the right.  Pain is worse at night, changes with weather. 

She has knee pain on the lateral aspect (points to tibial plateau and joint line) with swelling that goes down to the ankle left side.  She has been wearing a “Good Feet” OTC orthotic on the left side which she states helps quite a bit.

Generally speaking, stretching and analgesics make the discomfort better.    Ibuprofen 400 mg. b.i.d. can take the edge off  Soft sided brace (neoprene sleeve) makes a difference as well. The hard sided brace gives her difficulty.

WORK HISTORY: She works for a preschool.  Her job involves standing and getting up and down a lot.  

FAMILY HISTORY:  She has left sided lid ptosis, this evidently is familial.  

PHYSICAL EXAM:  She stood 5’ 1” and weighed approx. 150 pounds.

Viewing the knees bi-lat., the left knee is markedly externally rotated.

She does have a left short leg; tibial and femoral.  She has bilateral tibial torsion (look at the tibial tuberosities and drop a line straight down; it should pass through the 2nd metatarsal head) and marked internal tibial torsion on the left side (>60 degrees) with femoral retrotorsion (less than 8 degree angle of femoral head with the shaft) on this side.  There is no rotation of the thigh or leg past zero degrees midline. .  She had 10 degrees of tibial varum on the left hand side.  Her Q-angle is 10 degrees on that side.  There is plantar flexion inversion of the foot.  Left lower extremity has less sensation secondary to the her TKR  surgery.

Gait evaluation reveals a fair amount of midfoot pronation noted on the left hand side in addition to an intoed gait.  She has to lean her body over to the left to get the right leg to clear.

Some mild weakness noted of hip abduction musculature left hand side gluteus medius, middle and anterior fibers. Knee stability tests were negative.

Neurologically, otherwise, she had full integrity with respect to sensation, motor strength and deep tendon reflexes in the upper and lower extremities.

Please see part 2 of this post for additional info including our assessment and what WE did.

 The Gait Guys. Making it real, each and every post here on the blog.

special thanks to SZ for allowing us to publish her case, so others can learn

Podcast 76: The FMS™ screen and Injuries, Impact Loading & more.

Podcast 76: Association of Functional Movement Screen™ With Injuries, Wool workout gear, landing softly and more !

*Show sponsor: www.newbalancechicago.com

A. Link to our server: 

http://traffic.libsyn.com/thegaitguys/pod_77.1_76final.mp3

Direct Download: 

http://thegaitguys.libsyn.com/podcast-76

B. iTunes link:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-gait-guys-podcast/id559864138

C. Gait Guys online /download store (National Shoe Fit Certification and more !) :

http://store.payloadz.com/results/results.aspx?m=80204

D. other web based Gait Guys lectures:

www.onlinece.com   type in Dr. Waerlop or Dr. Allen,  ”Biomechanics”

______________

Today’s Show notes:

 
Last week on our social media sites we posted this article that garnered 9000+ hits:
Runner? LONG DISTANCE runner? Better be careful out there!
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/06/120604093108.htm
 
then this news this week:
Well-Regarded Endurance Athlete Chad Denning Dies While Running Appalachian Trail | Valley News
 
Association of Functional Movement Screen™ With Injuries in Division I Athletes
 
from a reader:
Hey guys, great site, sometimes a bit more than I know at this point. Just graduated from massage school in april. I have been diagnosed with tendonosis of the Achilles heel. Also finding that my leg doesn’t fully extend while walking, anything I can do besides hamstring and calf stretches. It really happened after a 30 mile hike with a 40 lb backpack, Help 
Thanks, sincerely Hector
Synthetic Workout Gear Smells Worse Than Cotton Gear
 
 Land Softly And Carry Less Injury Risk

http://running.competitor.com/2014/07/injury-prevention/land-softly-and-carry-less-injury-risk_11174

 
 
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tumblr_nc1x994UP81qhko2so2_1280.png

It is marathon season in Chicago. Time for this old reader-favorite blog post on Black toe nails !  

The Black Plague (ok, kinda sort of)……Subungal Hematomas in Runners. Blood under the toe nail.  It is not exactly what you think it is !

There are two pictures here, cursor to the right and see the slider that will toggle between the two photos. The photo with bandaid credit given towww.healthandrunning.com the other photo……is a runner client of ours with both a callus pattern on the tip of the 2nd toe and an early small subungal hematoma (read on !)

__________________________________________________________________________

We get inquiries about the black toe nail “Syndrome”……aka…..blood under the toe nails in our runners, and how to avoid them. Lets look at this phenomenon as it pertains to the foot.

This problem has a clinical name, “subungual hematoma”. It means a collection of blood under the finger or toe nail.  There are many causes of the subungal hematoma (SH for short as we move forward here).  Here are a few, but we have yet to find any good journal articles for one cause that we are seeing as a possible cause…one we will discuss here shortly. 

One cause is obvious, the crush injury where someone steps on your toe, you drop something onto it or smash it into something.  This is something we have all done at some time. 

 The most commonly theory of cause is repetitive trauma, thought to be that of repeated impact of the toe into the top or end of the shoe.  Heim et al  noted this in 2000.  This really got us to thinking.  Why, when we see these SH’s, do the runners never seem to have shoes that are too short / small or shoe signs of friction (wear patterning) of the toe nail into the top of the shoe’s upper ?  Often the runners insist there has been no such contact within the shoe.  So we started our own investigation making sure to ask all our runners what they thought and felt as they ramped up their miles in prep for marathons and 20 mile runs or daily doubles, particularly those who seemed regularly susceptible to SH’s.  We will discuss our findings and thoughts momentarily, but lets get back to some of the more well known information on SH’s.

The medical literature is full of other types of causes or clues of SH’s that must be investigated, such as medication reactions, autoimmune skin disorders, melanoma, blood disorders (dyscracias or clotting problems). These certainly are not the norm.

It is important to know the anatomy of the area because the nail bed is very rich in vasculature (hence the hematoma creation) and nerve endings (hence the pain) when blood collects in the confined area or it gets torn off from trauma.  The nail bed is a derivative of the epidermis containing keratin which gives it its hard nature. The nail grows from a nail root in front of the cuticle and grows distally at a slow but (usually) steady rate.  This area is frequently susceptible to fungal infections which destroy the tissue in the area and possibly make SH’s more common.

We will not get into the aggressive treatment of things here because that is 1) not our purpose here and 2) we do not want to be accountable for people getting infections  from boring a hole into the nail bed (trephine) to release the blood or the consequences of using plyers to yank it off.  We just tend to recommend they be left alone and let nature take its course.  (For those bold and tough gang, who chose the plyers method, you should know that there is no fatty tissue beneath the nail and the underlying bone to cushion the area, the nail is the only protection; furthermore you should know that the extensor tendon attachment is awfully close to the proximal nail bed root area !).  But when pain it too much, we have our people we refer these cases to.  Rather, we tend to look for a cause of the problem. 

In a limited number of cases we do see a shallow toe box where there is little room for toe extension, thus the nail can get rubbed on the roof of the toe box repeatedly causing a lifting action of the nail from its vascular bed.  This a more plausable cause in our opinion over the “toes hitting the end of the shoe” phenomenon put out there by many sources.  Particularly when most people size their shoes sufficiently long enough for the distal foot slip migration that occurs at mid-foot load within the shoe.  In  these cases a close cropping of the toe nail shoe stop the lifting/friction phenomena on the toe box roof. 

However, we seem to be seeing a more frequent trend that we wanted to share  here.  It seems to go hand in hand with the plague of flexor dominance in our society these days.  What we are seeing is a predominance of toe flexion (either a gentle or marked toe flexion ….we sometimes refer to it as toe hammering) in our runners.  This just makes sense because of the posterior compartment dominance in runners.  (The posterior compartment is made up of the gastroc-soleus complex, long toe flexors and tibialis posterior).  So if this compartment is dominant, and there is not sufficient home work to off set the flexor dominance with extensor exercises, then this flexion dominance will continue and possibly worsen.  As you will see either in yourself, our photo here, or on the feet of many of your co-runners is a distal “tip of the toe” callus development (usually most on the second toe, and less moving into the more lateral toes) immediately below the leading edge of the toe nail.  This callus coincides well with a distal gripping phenomenon of the long flexors (Flexor digitorum longus). So, now imagine, to get the callus there must be repeated friction and since the toe is not hitting the end of the shoe it must be friction into the sock liner bed of the shoe. And if this is the case, the skin is pulled at a differential rate over the distal phalange than the nail bed there will be a net lifting response of the nail from its bed as the skin is drawn forward of the backward drawn phalange  (put another way, the callused toe tip is fixed to the sock liner for grip, and then the phalange is drawn backwards from this contact point creating a NET movement of skin forward thus lifting the nail from its bedding).  [For an at-home example of this, put your hand flat on a table top. Now activate your distal long finger flexors so that only the tip of the fingers are in contact with the table top.  Now, without letting the finger tip-skin contact point move at all, go ahead and increase your long flexor tone/pull fairly aggressively. I defy you to not feel some  pressure building under the distal tip of the finger nail as the skin is RELATIVELY drawn forward.]   And with the nail bed being so vascular, micro bleeding can occur.  This bleeding is slow and takes time.  Which brings the big question to light, SH’s seem to mostly occur on very long runs, and never on short runs (where there is not enough nail bed separation repeatedly to create enough damage to bleed, not to mention fatigue of the other toe/foot intrinsic muscles thus necessitating more use of the more powerful long toe flexors.)

There  does not seem to be anything out there in the information on this supposition.  Maybe we are crazy…….but we do see alot of runners.  And once we bring the awareness of the problem to our runners and show them  how to reduce the flexion dominance with exercises to gain more extension balance, do we see an arrest of any further Subungal hematomas. 

We would love to hear your thoughts and experiences with them, both clinically and as a runner. Let us know what you think about our plausable cause.  

we remain……The Gait Guys

Remapping the Cortex: How Rehab Exercise does it.

Below are two studies that we recently incorporated into 2 neurologic gait cases during one of our global teleseminars on www.onlineCE.com.  You can find that lecture there in a few weeks but we have dozens of our other presentations available there presently. 

Injury to a body part starts a reorganization of the brain cortex. We know this occurs from a plethora of studies but most of them are based on injury induced changes and not from treatment-induced means.  These studies support the treatment induced changes that occur in the central nervous system, and they are profound and give us comfort and validity in our work. The findings of these studies should not be a shock to you if you are in the work of manual therapy and rehab. 

The one study used transcranial magnetic stimulation to map the cortical motor output area of a hand muscles on both sides in 13 stroke patients in the chronic stage of their illness before and after a 12-day-period of constraint-induced movement therapy.

What they found was “post treatment the muscle output area size in the affected hemisphere was significantly enlarged, corresponding to a greatly improved motor performance of the paretic limb”. As the study showed, this suggested a recruitment of adjacent brain areas. Even at 6 month follow up examinations “the motor performance remained at a high level, whereas the cortical area sizes in the 2 hemispheres became almost identical, representing a return of the balance of excitability between the 2 hemispheres toward a normal condition.”

The second study (2) looked at limb immobilization in 10 right-handed subjects with right upper extremity injury that required at least 14 days of limb immobilization. Subjects underwent 2 MRI examinations post injury, 48 hours and 16 days post immobilization. Cortical thickness of sensorimotor regions and FA of the corticospinal tracts was measured.  The findings showed “a decrease in cortical thickness in the left primary motor and somatosensory area as well as a decrease in FA in the left corticospinal tract. In addition, the motor skill of the left (noninjured) hand improved and is related to increased cortical thickness and FA in the right motor cortex.”

These studies suggest the findings are associated with skill transfer from the right to the left hand. It was suggested that immobilization induces rapid reorganization of the sensorimotor system. 

Rehab works, but everyone here on The Gait Guys already knew that. It is just nice to know the specifics of “how”.  

Please go to these articles and get the specifics for yourself. Don’t take our word for it ! 

references:

1. Stroke. 2000 Jun;31(6):1210-6.Treatment-induced cortical reorganization after stroke in humans. Liepert J1, Bauder H, Wolfgang HR, Miltner WH, Taub E, Weiller C.

2. Langer N, et al “Effects of limb immobilization on brain plasticity"Neurology 2012; 78: 182–188.

 

Steppage gait ? Or just a runway model ?  Take the thinking farther.
Today we have a short blog post for you. You may take the topic simply on the surface or cogitate over it and find some deeper epiphanies from the well of knowledge we have tried to present here on our blog for the past 4+ years.  
It is clear that in this video that the model has a consciously driven steppage gait. Meaning, she is lifting her limb/foot via exaggerated hip flexion and knee flexion to clear the foot.  This is often seen unilaterally in a foot drop case where the client has a neurologic lesion that for one reason or another has impaired the client’s ability to extend the toes or dorsiflex the ankle sufficiently to clear the foot (so they do not drag toes and trip/fall).  
But, why is she doing this steppage gait ? It is highly unlikely that she has bilateral lesions.  Sure, she was asked to walk this way by her mentor but again, take it further.  Is there a factor making this gait necessary regardless of the coaching ? 
Obviously the answer is yes or we wouldn’t be doing a blog post on this topic.  She is wearing ridiculously high heels. This is forcing her into an extreme plantarflexed foot and ankle posture. IF she were to swing her leg normally during the swing phase she would drive the foot and ankle into dorsiflexion (a normal gait event) and the long pointed heel would be made more prominent as it was driven forward and downward. This would surely catch on the ground, immediately driving the foot into sudden violent forefoot loading and pitch her into a forward fall.  Yes, you have seen this on the run way videos on youtube, and yes we know you laughed too ! You see, when wearing heels this high, one must deploy a certain degree of steppage gait to clear the heel because ankle plantarflexion is fraught with the risk we just discussed above, the heel is too prominent and will catch. How much steppage (knee flexion and hip flexion to clear the foot) is necessary ? Well, to a large degree it depends on how much of a heel is present.  If you are wearing a small heeled shoe, lets say 1 inch, then a small steppage is necessary.
None the less, there is a bigger problem lurking and brewing underneath when heels are a regular occurrence. Slowly and gradually the disuse of the anterior compartment muscles (Extensor dig., Ext. hallucis, peroneus tertius, tibialis anterior) will weaken and the posterior compartment will shorten respectively. IF left too long, it will result in tightness (yes, there is a difference between tightness and shortness, one is a neurlogical protective mechanism, the other is a more permanent change.) We have said this many times here and in our videos, much of posterior compartment problems (ie achilles tendonitis, Sever’s, Hagglunds etc) are related to a degree of anterior compartment weakness, skill deficits or endurance challenges.  Wearing high heels often will often, but not always, increase this risk. 
If you are an athlete, but someone who wears high heels often, you may have to do extra work to keep your anterior compartment competent on several levels.  Eccentric strength is just as important as concentric in this region. Remember, many gait problems come on slowly, a slow simmering smoldering fire. And remember this last point about heeled shoes, your forefoot is always being loaded initially in ankle plantarflexion, this is not normal and in time this will have a cost in many people.  
One last thing. We are not necessarily talking about dress shoes, although they are a greater culprit.  Many running shoes still have accentuated rear foot stack heights where the heel will be many millimeters above the plane of the forefoot.  Do not discount these shoes as a possible contributor of your problem, remember, physiological adaptation takes time to express into a biomechanical symptom creating problem, and it may take quite some time to resolve your compensations and adaptations.
PS: drive that “cross over gait” lady.  Fools.
Shawn and Ivo
the gait guys
Subtle clues often provide the answers.
We like yoga as much as anyone else. We saw this picture on the latest cover and couldn’t resist making a few comments on this pose.
Yoga has many benefits. Our understanding is that in addition to the c…

Subtle clues often provide the answers.

We like yoga as much as anyone else. We saw this picture on the latest cover and couldn’t resist making a few comments on this pose.

Yoga has many benefits. Our understanding is that in addition to the cognitive and spiritual effects of yoga, is that it helps to build your core.

 At first look you may say that this woman has a few issues:

  • she has a right pelvic shift and a left body lean
  • She has slight head rotation to the right and a slight left head tilt
  • you may have noticed that she appears to have more tone in the musculature on the right side of her face than on the left.   Just look at the nasolabial fold as well as the corner of her mouth any area of wrinkling underneath her left orbit.
  •  You may have also noticed the subtle flexion and lack of external rotation of the right hip.

 You may go on and think that she has a week right gluteus medius as well as an overactive quadratus lumborum on the left-hand side which may be causing the pelvic shift. The head tilt may be in compensation for the right side gluteus medius weakness and the subtle rotation may be an attempt to engage a tonic neck response. ( a tonic neck response is  ipsilateral extension of the upper and lower extremity to the side of head rotation with contralateral flexion of the same counterparts.

 You may have also noticed that the toes of the right foot are not dorsiflexed and that her hair appears to be flowing on the right side, and this is not the case at all, but rather she is either standing on a sloped surface or on the downward phase of a jump. According to the magazine it is the latter.  If you caught this at first then congratulations: you are sharper than most. If not remember to always look for subtle clues.

 Like Sir Topham Hat says in Thomas the Train: “  You didn’t get the whole story. What really happened is what really matters.

So why the mild facial ptosis on the left side? She could have had an old Bells palsy, or other form of facial paresis. Note that mostly the lower portions of the (left) face are affected (ie, below the eye). We remember that the upper portions of the face receive bilateral innervation but lower portions of the face unilateral innervation, from the contra lateral facial motor nucleus; this is why it could be a mild upper motor neuron lesion (micro infact, lack of cortical afferent input) and not an lower motor neuron lesion (like Bells Palsy). Why is this germane? Or is it not?

Stand in front of a mirror. Jump up in the air trying to assume the same pose as this woman does and what do you see.  Make sure that you jump up from both legs and then bring one leg over and your hands in front of you in the "praying position”. You may want to have a friend take a snapshot of you performing this. You will notice that you have contralateral head rotation,  a pelvic hike on the side opposite the leg that’s extended and a head tilt to the side that is flexed.  You are attempting to stabilize your core as you’re going up and coming down.

What we are witnessing is a normal neurological phenomena.  This gal merely seems to have some limited external rotation of her left hip. Now perform the same maneuver again but this time don’t externally rotate your leg as far as this woman does and what do you see. You should’ve seen an increase in the aforementioned body postures.

Subtle clues are often the key. Keep your eyes and ears open. 

The Gait Guys. Helping the subtle to become everyday for you, with each and every post.

Podcast 75: Joint Symmetry, Clinical Pearls & Random Thoughts

Lots of good random topics on today’s podcast, including possible causes of leg length discrepancies.

*Show sponsor: www.newbalancechicago.com

A. Link to our server: 

http://traffic.libsyn.com/thegaitguys/pod_true76f.mp3

Direct Download: 

http://thegaitguys.libsyn.com/podcast-75-joint-symmetry-cases-stuff

B. iTunes link:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-gait-guys-podcast/id559864138

C. Gait Guys online /download store (National Shoe Fit Certification and more !) :

http://store.payloadz.com/results/results.aspx?m=80204

D. other web based Gait Guys lectures:

www.onlinece.com   type in Dr. Waerlop or Dr. Allen,  ”Biomechanics”

______________

Today’s Show notes:


Neurons in human skin perform advanced calculations

http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-09-neurons-human-skin-advanced.html

RunScribe Is A Wearable For Granular Gait Analysis
Free dialogue on leg length discrepancies.

Evidence for joint moment asymmetry in healthy populations during gait.

Gait Posture. 2014 Jul 1. pii: S0966-6362(14)00610-9. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2014.06.010. [Epub ahead of print]
The contralateral foot in children with unilateral clubfoot, is the unaffected side normal?

http://www.gaitposture.com/article/S0966-6362(14)00523-2/abstract

Gait guys case on Club foot:

http://thegaitguys.tumblr.com/post/23230149195/we-could-have-easily-made-this-a-blog-post-about

How injury and pain reorganize the brain.

Gait, Arm Swing and Reorganizing the Brain

When we injure a body part there is a price to pay, how expensive it will be is entirely up to you. Upon injury, the brain takes note and typically dives into a backup plan of neurologic inhibition, neuro-protective tightness and alteration of motor patterns to protect that injured area and allow it to heal. Moderating and altering the forces and demands upon said tissues is the goal to enable healing, if we as humans, don’t get in the way first (“I have to get that run in, I am behind in my training with all these injuries !” or “Ah, its still not that bad, the pain wasn’t worse on Tuesday’s run, I will be ok.”). The bigger question for most folks is, will you listen to what your body is asking of you? Heed the warnings and messages, and your injury will come and go in a timely manner, ignore the messages and welcome to a chronic festering problem.

These protective mechanisms need to be in place, we just have to listen to them.  Failure to heed their warnings to dial things back and rest, recover and heal, the brain will make alternative changes out of necessity.

In the medpage today article in the references below, the authors discuss several important things.

“Getting a cast or splint causes the brain to rapidly shift its resources to make righties function better as lefties, researchers found.
Right-handed individuals whose dominant arm had to be immobilized after an injury showed a drop in (brain) cortical thickness in the area that controls primary motor and sensory areas for the hand, Nicolas Langer, MSc, of the University of Zurich in Switzerland, and colleagues reported.
Over the same two-week period, white and gray matter increased in the areas that controlled the uninjured left hand, suggesting “skill transfer from the right to the left hand,” the group reported in the Jan. 17 issue of Neurology.
The findings highlight the plasticity of the brain in rapidly adapting to changing demands, but also hold implications for clinical practice, they noted.”

This article highlights the rapid changes in motor programs that occur. It does not take long for the body to begin to develop not only functional adaptations but neurologic changes at the brain level within days and certainly less than 2 weeks.

So how long have you been in this pain ? If someone has to ask you this question, the process has already begun.

We tell our patients, if pain does not go away fairly quickly, that we need to get on top of the injury quickly. That is not to say you need to reach for the phone every time you have pain but you need to heighten your awareness of the injury’s status and  you need to make sure you are not driving session after session of training into a festering injury. If you do not let something heal and recover, the brain will find a way around it.  And it will imprint that new motor pattern into hard wiring, and into the hard wiring of other patterns, if you do not heed the warning signs.  This new wiring is a compensation pattern. And the longer it is there the more the neurologic pattern becomes embedded by layerings of myelin coating.  Which means that in the future, if you fatigue or injury another local tissue, this old compensation pattern is waiting in the shadows looking for an opening to rear its ugly head for old times sake.

Furthermore, on the topic of asymmetry, the above concept holds strongly true. In our clinics, we recognize asymmetry as a strong clinical finding. Despite the  Lathrop-Lambach study below, mentioning that they feel a 10% baseline asymmetry is the norm, if you do not rehab and correct both an injury and its new neurologic hardwiring changes, you have enabled and welcomed asymmetry. We feel, as many others do, that asymmetry can be a major component and predictor to injury. Logically, restoring as much symmetry as possible, both biomechanically and neurologically, is restorative and protective.

Don’t be a stoic knucklehead. Get your stuff fixed by someone who knows what they are doing. And remember, watching your gait on a treadmill or through some high tech gait analysis software and making recommendations from that information is just plain idiotic. Go see someone smart who can correlated it to examination findings. 

This article pertains to athletes and non-athletes of all walks of life. From 5 to 105 years of age, we are all susceptible to the brain’s overriding mechanisms. 

Shawn and Ivo

references:

1. Broken arm can reorganize the brain.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Neurology/GeneralNeurology/30686

Gait Posture. 2014 Jul 1. pii: S0966-6362(14)00610-9. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2014.06.010. [Epub ahead of print]
Evidence for joint moment asymmetry in  healthy populations during gait.
"We found a high amount of asymmetry between the limbs in healthy populations. More than half of our overall population exceeded 10% asymmetry in peak hip and knee flexion and adduction moments. Group medians exceeded 10% asymmetry for all variables in all populations. This may have important implications on gait evaluations, particularly clinical evaluations or research studies where asymmetry is used as an outcome. Additional research is necessary to determine acceptable levels of joint moment asymmetry during gait and to determine whether asymmetrical joint moments influence the development of symptomatic pathology or success of lower extremity rehabilitation.”