It's early January - you're probably looking to work off some of your Christmas kilos and shed that festive spare tyre. For millions of people around the world, that means making a New Year's resolution, buying a new pair of runners and hitting the road for a jog. But a new musculoskeletal study has concluded that the average modern running shoe is significantly more damaging to your knees, hips and ankles than running barefoot - or even walking in high heels. With osteoarthritis of the knee representing the biggest cause of disability in the elderly, this is a serious finding that's worth taking into account if you want to protect your joints.
Time and again, nature's solutions for physical architecture prove the most effective in the long run - and the world of running is waking up to the fact that the traditional cushioned running shoe might actually be doing more harm than good.
When you run barefoot, you naturally run on the balls of your feet, which lets your foot and ankle act as a wide-angled shock absorber for your whole leg. It's a scaled-down version of the way four-legged animals use their rear legs. The arch of your foot flattens with each stride and provides extra spring to the next step.
But when you use the average cushioned running shoe, with its elevated heel and arch supports, the tendency is to hit the ground with your heel first. While the shoes are designed to soak up a fair bit of the shock, they transmit the rest back up through the ankle, knee and hip, cumulatively causing the joint and cartilege damage that leads to conditions like osteoarthritis.
The Study
Published in PM&R, from the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, "The Effect of Running Shoes on Lower Extremity Joint Torques" took 68 healthy young adult runners of mixed sex and asked them to run at their normal comfortable pace on a treadmill after warming up.
Through onboard instrumentation, they collected data on the rotational torque that each runner's stride placed on the ankle, knee and hip - and had them run barefoot and in conventional running shoes chosen to exemplify the general traits of the genre.
Results
From the study: "Increased joint torques at the hip, knee, and ankle were observed with running shoes compared with running barefoot. Disproportionately large increases were observed in the hip internal rotation torque and in the knee flexion and knee varus torques. An average 54% increase in the hip internal rotation torque, a 36% increase in knee flexion torque, and a 38% increase in knee varus torque were measured when running in running shoes compared with barefoot."
Conclusions
From the study: "The findings at the knee suggest relatively greater pressures at anatomical sites that are typically more prone to knee osteoarthritis, the medial and patellofemoral compartments. It is important to note the limitations of these findings and of current 3-dimensional gait analysis in general, that only resultant joint torques were assessed. It is unknown to what extent actual joint contact forces could be affected by compliance that a shoe might provide, a potentially valuable design characteristic that may offset the observed increases in joint torques."
Running alternatives
The study supports the sentiment among a growing number of distance runners who are choosing to run barefoot and take advantage of what advocate Barefoot Ted describes as "the best pair of shoes you will ever own" - your feet.
But not everyone's got iron soles like Ted - so in the shorter term there's changes you can make if you wish to switch to a less harmful running style. For starters, you could switch to running in flat-soled shoes with minimal padding, and changing your stride to avoid passing shock up through your heel - for most people, this adjustment comes naturally when the cushioning effect of a running shoe is removed.
Or you could take the concept further - Vibram have built a running shoe that's basically designed to be nothing but a flexible, high-traction shield for the bottom of your foot, held on by the minimal possible fabric and with tiny pockets for each toe to give your feet the ability to move as naturally as possible.
The "Five Fingers" range (see above) have been building in popularity as a 'barefoot lite' option that opens up a wider range of surfaces and terrains for barefoot runners and protects the sole while encouraging a natural running motion.
If you've had any experience with barefoot or minimal-shoe running, let us know in the comments below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPj9YGgqJ64
but thats the whole point of a running shoe isn\'t it? So this is an unsatisfactory study.
When I run (I am not a runner), I run barefoot. When I was much younger, I showed up for a volunteer firefighter event and ran a mile and a half on pavement barefoot. Pavement is the hardest on bare feet, believe it or not.
I also hike barefoot (just finished a hike yesterday where more than a few people asked about it). I get a lot of comments, as you can well imagine.
What I find is several things 1. When running across the desert of the southwest (yes, cactus!), I look and place my feet at speed. You just can\'t run and put your foot on anything, but this increases agility and awareness. It\'s automatic now. 2. When you run barefoot, you run differently - you\'re placing your feet instead of landing on them. I find I run much more lightly than many of my friends because of that, even though I have 80 pounds on them (mesomorph).
It won\'t come overnight. The same way you get blisters doing minor yardwork, you have to build up callouses on your feet. I\'m not talking big, thick, unattractive callouses either. People look at my feet and would never guess I go barefoot much of the year.
Check this site out for more details, he runs marathons barefoot! http://runningbarefoot.org/
When I tried to take up running again in recent years, I still ran on the balls of my feet, since old ingrained habits die hard, but found that the wide flat soles of today\'s running shoes didn\'t alloy for the natural angle of my foot as it struck the pavement. My foot would strike strike on the outer edge, and be torqued flat by the outside edge of the shoe.
Indoors at the local fitness club, I took to running on the treadmill barefoot (with socks on) because it was easier, more natural and more comfortable, After a few days, the director came by and told me i couldn\'t use the treadmill without shoes because it was too dangerous.
I wish I had this article back then. Currently I run in an old pair of sprinters shoes with a crowned sole which allows good contact at any angle.