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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Terminated

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04197362
Other study ID # IRB00112113
Secondary ID
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date October 19, 2023
Est. completion date December 13, 2023

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source Emory University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study aims to directly compare traditional everyday activity shoes (ASICS, Nike) with a shoe created to be flatter, less cushioned, and with less cradling of the foot (OESH shoe).


Description:

This study addresses a common question in popular media: what attributes of traditional everyday activity shoes (Nike, New Balance, etc.) make a shoe better or worse. There have been several peer-reviewed studies aimed to answer this by calculating forces and torques at the ankles, knees, and hips while subjects wore shoes with different properties. Such characteristics include heel size, cushioning and side-to-side cradling of the foot. Interestingly, most studies have shown that the lack of a heel, less cushioning, and less cradling of the foot actually improve the biomechanics related to forces and torques, thus decreasing wear and tear on the cartilage and bones of the leg. Wear and tear on cartilage and bone may predispose patients to a bone condition called "osteoarthritis", which is a disease where bones become damaged from rubbing on each other with breakdown of a cartilage "cushion". This study thus aims to directly compare traditional everyday activity shoes (ASICS, Nike) with a shoe created to be flatter, less cushioned, and with less cradling of the foot (OESH shoe).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Terminated
Enrollment 6
Est. completion date December 13, 2023
Est. primary completion date December 13, 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Female
Age group 18 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Women between the ages of 18-65 - Women who identify as "healthy" - Women who run or walk for exercise more than three times per week - Women in the Atlanta, Georgia area Exclusion Criteria: - Individuals with history of significant musculoskeletal pathology - Individuals with musculoskeletal injury at time of testing - Individuals unable to consent - Individuals outside of the ages 18-65 - Individuals who are prisoners - Individuals who do not speak or write in English

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Evaluation
Subjects will be asked to walk across the gait laboratory floor at their self-selected walking speed. They will complete a 3-5 minute warm up period, as it was found to produce stable estimates of kinetic parameter mean values during treadmill activity. The positions of each marker will be recorded through the motion capture system. Ground reaction force will be obtained in real time from the gait laboratory force plates as marker dimensions are recorded. For walking data, two trials of 15 seconds each will be recorded. The second trial will be a redundancy in the setting of potential significant marker dropout.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Emory Rehabilitation Hospital Atlanta Georgia

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Emory University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Differences in torques at the knee comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Primary Differences in forces at the knee comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in torques at the bilateral anterior and posterior superior spine comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in forces at the bilateral anterior and posterior superior spine comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in torques at the lateral femoral condyles comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in forces at the lateral femoral condyles comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in torques at the lateral mid-shanks comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in forces at the lateral mid-shanks comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up day
Secondary Differences in torques at the lateral malleoli comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in forces at the lateral malleoli comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in torques at the second metatarsal heads comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in forces at the second metatarsal heads comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in torques at the heels comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up
Secondary Differences in forces at the heels comparing three study arms Joint torques and forces will be assessed via 16 markers placed on specified anatomical landmarks of the pelvis and lower extremities as the subjects walk across the gait floor at a self-selected speed. In analysis, joint torques and forces will be calculated through full inverse-dynamic model implementation using the Vicon Plug-In Gait. Differences in torques and peak forces will be calculated by ANOVA along with 95% confidence intervals. One-time at enrollment, no follow-up