Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence

Objective: The aim of the study was to investigate gender and age effect on dynamic plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence. Methods: A total of 524 adolescents (211 women and 313 men; mean age: 12.58 ± 1.11 years (range: 11–14 years)) participated in pedobarographic measurements during g...

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Main Authors: İlkşan Demirbüken, Bahar Özgül, Eren Timurtaş, Saadet Ufuk Yurdalan, Murat Dinçer Çekin, Mine Gülden Polat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AVES Yayincilik 2019-05-01
Series:Acta Orthopaedica et Traumatologica Turcica
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1017995X1730648X
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spelling doaj-b400bec787784baabbf1fcabd4da67eb2020-11-25T03:34:07ZengAVES YayincilikActa Orthopaedica et Traumatologica Turcica1017-995X2019-05-01533215220Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescenceİlkşan Demirbüken0Bahar Özgül1Eren Timurtaş2Saadet Ufuk Yurdalan3Murat Dinçer Çekin4Mine Gülden Polat5Marmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Istanbul, TurkeyMarmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Istanbul, TurkeyMarmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Istanbul, Turkey; Corresponding author. Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Marmara University, Başıbüyük Health Campus, Başıbüyük Road No: 3, Başıbüyük/Maltepe, İstanbul, Turkey. Tel.: +90 216 399 93 71; fax: +90 216 399 62 42.Marmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Istanbul, TurkeyMarmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Health Management, Istanbul, TurkeyMarmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Istanbul, TurkeyObjective: The aim of the study was to investigate gender and age effect on dynamic plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence. Methods: A total of 524 adolescents (211 women and 313 men; mean age: 12.58 ± 1.11 years (range: 11–14 years)) participated in pedobarographic measurements during gait at self-selected speed. Data of peak pressure (PP), maximum force (MaxF-Newton), body weight corrected maximum force (BW_MaxF), contact area (CA-cm2) were analyzed for total foot and four plantar regions (hindfoot, midfoot, forefoot and toes). Results: Higher toes PP was found in the ages of 12–14 years in females compared to males (253.79 ± 104.93 vs 216.00 ± 81.12 for the age of 12, p = 0.011, 264.40 ± 65.02 vs 227.21 ± 83.4 for the age of 13, p = 0.044, 299.75 ± 140.60 vs 238.75 ± 103.32 for the age of 14, p = 0.005). Females' higher MaxF especially for toes (136.24 ± 48.54 vs 115.33 ± 46.03, p = 0.008) and smaller CA especially for forefoot (50.12 ± 5.79 vs 54.4893 ± 6.80, p = 0.001) were considerable in the late of early adolescence. Forefoot (305.66 ± 82.14 females p = 0.001, 281.35 ± 79.59 males p < 0.001) and total foot PP (374.08 ± 113.93 females, p = 0.035, 338.61 ± 85.85 males p = 0.009) at the age of 14 was significantly higher than in younger ages in both gender groups. Conclusion: The results indicate that especially the age of 14 years in early adolescence is a critical age for alteration in plantar pressure distribution. Interestingly females tended to increase their toe and forefoot plantar pressures compared to males by increasing age. We suggest that gender and age impact on toes plantar pressure alterations in early adolescence may be a possible risk factor for further foot impairments. Level of Evidence: Level III, Diagnostic Study. Keywords: Adolescent, Age, Gender, Plantar pressure, Pedobarographyhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1017995X1730648X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author İlkşan Demirbüken
Bahar Özgül
Eren Timurtaş
Saadet Ufuk Yurdalan
Murat Dinçer Çekin
Mine Gülden Polat
spellingShingle İlkşan Demirbüken
Bahar Özgül
Eren Timurtaş
Saadet Ufuk Yurdalan
Murat Dinçer Çekin
Mine Gülden Polat
Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
Acta Orthopaedica et Traumatologica Turcica
author_facet İlkşan Demirbüken
Bahar Özgül
Eren Timurtaş
Saadet Ufuk Yurdalan
Murat Dinçer Çekin
Mine Gülden Polat
author_sort İlkşan Demirbüken
title Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
title_short Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
title_full Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
title_fullStr Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
title_full_unstemmed Gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
title_sort gender and age impact on plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence
publisher AVES Yayincilik
series Acta Orthopaedica et Traumatologica Turcica
issn 1017-995X
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Objective: The aim of the study was to investigate gender and age effect on dynamic plantar pressure distribution in early adolescence. Methods: A total of 524 adolescents (211 women and 313 men; mean age: 12.58 ± 1.11 years (range: 11–14 years)) participated in pedobarographic measurements during gait at self-selected speed. Data of peak pressure (PP), maximum force (MaxF-Newton), body weight corrected maximum force (BW_MaxF), contact area (CA-cm2) were analyzed for total foot and four plantar regions (hindfoot, midfoot, forefoot and toes). Results: Higher toes PP was found in the ages of 12–14 years in females compared to males (253.79 ± 104.93 vs 216.00 ± 81.12 for the age of 12, p = 0.011, 264.40 ± 65.02 vs 227.21 ± 83.4 for the age of 13, p = 0.044, 299.75 ± 140.60 vs 238.75 ± 103.32 for the age of 14, p = 0.005). Females' higher MaxF especially for toes (136.24 ± 48.54 vs 115.33 ± 46.03, p = 0.008) and smaller CA especially for forefoot (50.12 ± 5.79 vs 54.4893 ± 6.80, p = 0.001) were considerable in the late of early adolescence. Forefoot (305.66 ± 82.14 females p = 0.001, 281.35 ± 79.59 males p < 0.001) and total foot PP (374.08 ± 113.93 females, p = 0.035, 338.61 ± 85.85 males p = 0.009) at the age of 14 was significantly higher than in younger ages in both gender groups. Conclusion: The results indicate that especially the age of 14 years in early adolescence is a critical age for alteration in plantar pressure distribution. Interestingly females tended to increase their toe and forefoot plantar pressures compared to males by increasing age. We suggest that gender and age impact on toes plantar pressure alterations in early adolescence may be a possible risk factor for further foot impairments. Level of Evidence: Level III, Diagnostic Study. Keywords: Adolescent, Age, Gender, Plantar pressure, Pedobarography
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1017995X1730648X
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