Pressure relief and load redistribution by custom-made insoles in diabetic patients with neuropathy and foot deformity

Objective. To study the effects of custom-made insoles on plantar pressures and load redistribution in neuropathic diabetic patients with foot deformity. Design. Cross-sectional. Background. Although custom-made insoles are commonly prescribed to diabetic patients, little quantitative data on their...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical biomechanics (Bristol) 2004-07, Vol.19 (6), p.629-638
Hauptverfasser: Bus, Sicco A, Ulbrecht, Jan S, Cavanagh, Peter R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective. To study the effects of custom-made insoles on plantar pressures and load redistribution in neuropathic diabetic patients with foot deformity. Design. Cross-sectional. Background. Although custom-made insoles are commonly prescribed to diabetic patients, little quantitative data on their mechanical action exists. Methods. Regional in-shoe peak pressures and force-time integrals were measured during walking in the feet of 20 neuropathic diabetic subjects with foot deformity who wore flat or custom-made insoles. Twenty-one feet with elevated risk for ulceration at the first metatarsal head were analysed. Load redistribution resulting from custom-made insoles was assessed using a new load-transfer algorithm. Results. Custom-made insoles significantly reduced peak pressures and force-time integrals in the heel and first metatarsal head regions; pressures and integrals were significantly increased in the medial midfoot region compared with flat insoles. Custom-made insoles successfully reduced pressures in and integrals at the first metatarsal head in 7/21 feet, were moderately successful in another seven, but failed in the remaining seven. Load transfer was greatest from the lateral heel to the medial midfoot regions. Conclusions. Custom-made insoles were more effective than flat insoles in off-loading the first metatarsal head region, but with considerable variability between individuals. Most off-loading occurred in the heel (not a region typically at risk). The load transfer algorithm effectively analyses custom-made-insole action. Relevance Because similar insole modifications apparently exert different effects in different patients, a comprehensive evaluation of custom designs using in-shoe pressure measurement should ideally be conducted before dispensing insoles to diabetic patients with neuropathy and foot deformity.
ISSN:0268-0033
1879-1271
DOI:10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2004.02.010