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Everyday Activity Shoes: a Quantification of Impact Forces While Walking

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Emory University

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Impact Forces

Treatments

Other: Evaluation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04197362
IRB00112113

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to directly compare traditional everyday activity shoes (ASICS, Nike) with a shoe created to be flatter, less cushioned, and with less cradling of the foot (OESH shoe).

Full description

This study addresses a common question in popular media: what attributes of traditional everyday activity shoes (Nike, New Balance, etc.) make a shoe better or worse. There have been several peer-reviewed studies aimed to answer this by calculating forces and torques at the ankles, knees, and hips while subjects wore shoes with different properties. Such characteristics include heel size, cushioning and side-to-side cradling of the foot. Interestingly, most studies have shown that the lack of a heel, less cushioning, and less cradling of the foot actually improve the biomechanics related to forces and torques, thus decreasing wear and tear on the cartilage and bones of the leg. Wear and tear on cartilage and bone may predispose patients to a bone condition called "osteoarthritis", which is a disease where bones become damaged from rubbing on each other with breakdown of a cartilage "cushion". This study thus aims to directly compare traditional everyday activity shoes (ASICS, Nike) with a shoe created to be flatter, less cushioned, and with less cradling of the foot (OESH shoe).

Enrollment

6 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Women between the ages of 18-65
  • Women who identify as "healthy"
  • Women who run or walk for exercise more than three times per week
  • Women in the Atlanta, Georgia area

Exclusion criteria

  • Individuals with history of significant musculoskeletal pathology
  • Individuals with musculoskeletal injury at time of testing
  • Individuals unable to consent
  • Individuals outside of the ages 18-65
  • Individuals who are prisoners
  • Individuals who do not speak or write in English

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

6 participants in 3 patient groups

ASICS Women's Gel-Venture 6 Running-Shoe
Experimental group
Description:
ASICS Women's Gel-Venture 6 Running-Shoe
Treatment:
Other: Evaluation
Nike Air Max 270
Experimental group
Description:
Nike Air Max 270
Treatment:
Other: Evaluation
La Vida+
Experimental group
Description:
La Vida+
Treatment:
Other: Evaluation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

David Burke, MD, MA; Gina Bell, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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