Background: Foot sole plantar pressure generates transient but habitual cutaneous ischemia, which is even more exacerbated in atypical gait patterns. Thus, adequate post-occlusive reactive hyperaemia (PORH) is necessary to maintain skin health. Plantar pressure regional variance during daily tasks potentially generates region-specific PORH, crucial for ischemic defence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The foot sole endures high magnitudes of pressure for sustained periods which results in transient but habitual cutaneous ischemia. Upon unloading, microvascular reactivity in cutaneous capillaries generates an influx of blood flow (PORH: post-occlusive reactive hyperemia). Whether pressure induced cutaneous ischemia from loading the foot sole impacts mechanoreceptor sensitivity remains unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
November 2023
Cutaneous input is important in postural control and balance. Aging and diabetes impair skin sensitivity and motor control. Heat application can improve skin sensation, but its influence on motor control remains unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine how heating affects dynamic joint position sense at the knee, participants (n = 11; F = 6) were seated in a HUMAC NORM dynamometer. The leg was passively moved through extension and flexion, and participants indicated when the 90° reference position was perceived, both at baseline (28.74 ± 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoot orthoses (FO) are used as a treatment for biomechanical abnormalities, overuse injuries, and neuropathologies, but study of their mechanism remains inconclusive. The neuromotor paradigm has proposed that FOs may manipulate sensory input from foot sole skin to reduce muscle activity for movement optimization. This review argues that a FO likely alters the incoming mechanical stimuli transmitted via cutaneous mechanoreceptors and nociceptors as the foot sole interfaces with the surface of the orthotic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrecise control of the ankle is required to safely clear the ground during walking. Skin input contributes to proprioception about the ankle joint, during both passive movements and level walking. How skin might contribute to proprioceptive control of the ankle during a more complex functional task such as obstacle avoidance is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of the current study was to explore the role of dorsal foot skin on the joint kinematics of gait during level walking. Twelve volunteers experienced sensory perturbations with either reduced dorsal skin feedback using topical anesthetic, reduced visual feedback of the lower visual field, or a combination of both cutaneous and visual reductions (paired). The visual condition was introduced to impose a greater reliance on skin input (goggles occluded lower visual field input).
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