Walking in a controlled ankle motion (CAM) boot: In-boot measurement of joint kinematics and kinetics.

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All Authors

Stolycia, ML.
Lunn, DE.
Wilkins, RA.
Barnett, CT.
Walker, J.

LTHT Author

Lunn, David
Wilkins, Richard

LTHT Department

NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre
Podiatry

Non Medic

Podiatrist

Publication Date

2024

Item Type

Journal Article

Language

Subject

Subject Headings

Abstract

Research investigating ankle function during walking in a controlled ankle motion (CAM) boot has either placed markers on the outside of the boot or made major alterations to the structure of the CAM boot to uncover key landmarks. The aim of this study was to quantify joint kinematics and kinetics using "in-boot" skin markers whilst making only minimal structural alterations. Seventeen healthy participants walked at their preferred walking speed in two conditions: (1) in standard athletic trainers (ASICS patriot 8, ASICS Oceania Pty Ltd, USA), and (2) using a hard-cased CAM boot (Rebound R Air Walker, Ossur, Iceland) fitted on the right foot. Kinematic measurements revealed that CAM boots restrict sagittal plane ankle range of motion to less than 5degree, and to ~3degree in the frontal plane, which is a reduction of 85% and 73% compared to standard footwear, respectively (p < 0.001). This ankle restriction resulted in a reduction of ankle joint total limb work contribution from 38 +/- 5% in normal footwear to 13 +/- 4% in the CAM boot (p < 0.001). This study suggests that CAM boots do restrict the ankle joint's ability to effectively perform work during walking, which leads to compensatory mechanisms at the ipsilateral and contralateral hip and knee joints. Our findings align with previous research that employed "on-boot" kinematic measurements, so we conclude that in-boot approaches do not offer any benefit to the researcher and instead, on-boot measurements are suitable.

Journal

Journal of Biomechanics