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Immediate effects of wearing textured versus smooth insoles on standing balance and spatiotemporal gait patterns when walking over even and uneven surfaces in people with multiple sclerosis.

Anna L HattonKatrina WilliamsMark D ChatfieldSheree E HurnJayishni N MaharajElise M GaneThomas CattagniJohn DixonKeith RomeGraham K KerrSandra G Brauer
Published in: Disability and rehabilitation (2022)
For pwMS, stimulating the foot with "texture" appears to provide enhanced sensory input with the capacity to improve CoP movement control during standing; offering a potential new treatment option for balance rehabilitation. Further research is needed to identify which individuals may benefit most from textured insoles.Implications for rehabilitationTextured shoe insoles, designed to stimulate plantar mechanoreceptors, are a novel approach to improve standing balance and walking patterns in people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS).Wearing textured insoles for the first time can lead to improvements in centre of pressure movement control when standing on an unstable compliant supporting surface.Textured insoles offer a potential new treatment technique for balance rehabilitation in pwMS who show early signs of diminished foot sensation.
Keyphrases
  • multiple sclerosis
  • magnetic resonance
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • climate change
  • lower limb
  • human health
  • replacement therapy