NEWS NAVIGATOR
Englemed logo
SIGN UP FOR UPDATES!
Sign up for Englemed updates from TwitterSign up for Englemed updates from Facebook
BOOKS AND GIFTS THIS WAY!
BookshopFor books on women's health, healthy eating ideas, mental health issues, diabetes, etc click here
SEARCH THIS SITE
ENGLEMED
Contact Englemed
Send an e-mail with your comments!
We can provide a specialist, tailored health and medical news service for your site.
Click here for more information
RSS graphic XML Graphic Add to Google
About Englemed news services - services and policies.
Englemed News Blog - Ten years and counting.
Diary of a reluctant allergy sufferer - How the British National Health Service deals with allergy.
Copyright Notice. All reports, text and layout copyright Englemed Ltd, 52 Perry Avenue, Birmingham UK B42 2NE. Co Registered in England No 7053778 Some photos copyright Englemed Ltd, others may be used with permission of copyright owners.
Disclaimer: Englemed is a news service and does not provide health advice. Advice should be taken from a medical professional or appropriate health professional about any course of treatment or therapy.
FreeDigitalPhotos
www.freedigitalphotos.net
FreeWebPhotos
www.freewebphoto.com
TODAY'S NEWS
Antiseptic on umbilical cord fights infection
Wed February 8th - Cleaning a newborn's umbilical cord at birth can help to limit infections, experts say today. More
Age - a risk factor for breast cancer death
Wed February 8th - Older women with breast cancer face a greater risk of succumbing to the disease than younger women, according to a Dutch study published today. More
THIS WEEK'S STORIES
Solid food weaning 'best'
Tues February 7th - Parents may do better for their infants by weaning them with solid food rather than with pureed food, British researchers report today. More
House-moves "bad" for children?
Tues February 7th - Children who move home frequently in childhood face an increased risk of poor health in later life, researchers warned today. More
Consuming fish during pregnancy 'improves' baby brain power
Mon February 6th - Eating fish during pregnancy could bolster the infant’s intelligence, according to early findings from a major European study. More
Stroke gene found
Mon February 6th - British scientists have found a new gene linked to a common cause of stroke, it was announced last night. More
Malaria kills double the numbers originally believed
Mon February 6th - Malaria kills 1.2 million people a year – twice as many as previously thought – with almost half of the deaths being children over the age of five. More
ENGLEMED HEALTH NEWS

Running shoes strain joints - new study

Tuesday January 5th, 2010

Running shoes may do more damage to the joints than high heels, researchers warned yesterday.

Modern shoes cause significant twisting of the knee compared with running barefoot, researchers found.

The experts called on manufacturers to put more work into developing shoes that do not cause harm.

The findings come from a study of 68 young adult runners, each running at least 15 miles a week. There were 37 women.

The runners were studied using a treadmill and motion analysis.

The study showed a 54 per cent increase in twisting of the hip and increases of more than 35 per cent in twisting of the knee compared with barefoot running. the findings have been published in PM&R: The journal of injury, function and rehabilitation.

An earlier study of high heels had found they only increase twisting of the knee by up to 26 per cent.

Researcher Dr Casey Kerrigan, who works for a technology company in Charlottesville, Virginia, USA, said joints also had to tolerate greater loads during running than walking.

He said: "Remarkably, the effect of running shoes on knee joint torques during running that the authors observed here is even greater than the effect that was reported earlier of high-heeled shoes during walking.

"The current findings indeed represent substantial biomechanical changes."

He added: "Reducing joint torques with footwear completely to that of barefoot running, while providing meaningful footwear functions, especially compliance, should be the goal of new footwear designs."

The Effect of Running Shoes on Lower Extremity Joint Torques - by D. Casey Kerrigan, MD, Jason R. Franz, MS, Geoffrey S. Keenan, MD, Jay Dicharry, MPT, Ugo Della Croce, PhD, and Robert P. Wilder, MD. PM&R: The journal of injury, function and rehabilitation, Volume 1, Issue 12 (December 2009)

Tags: Fitness | North America | Orthopaedics | Rheumatology

Printer friendly page Printer friendly page

CATEGORIES