Running barefoot is a better way to avoid those painful repetitive stress injuries
IF RUNNING is your thing, you may want to throw away those pricey sports shoes and just do it barefoot, according to a study released recently.
Some three-quarters of runners who wear shoes land squarely on their heels – about 1,000 times for every mile run.
But even well-cushioned sports shoes that help distribute weight across the foot cannot fully absorb the shock of these blows: 30% to 75% of regular runners each year suffer repetitive stress injuries.
By contrast, the vast majority of unshod runners don’t hit the ground with their heels, landing instead on the sides or balls of their feet, the study found.
The practice is especially common in several East African countries where long-distance running is nearly a national past time.
In 1960, for example, a shoeless Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia won the 1960 Olympics marathon in record time.
By not ‘heel-striking’, barefoot runners avoid painful and potentially damaging impacts that concentrate the equivalent of two or three times one’s body weight onto a coin-sized surface.
“People who don’t wear shoes when they run have an astonishingly different strike,” said Daniel Lieberman, a professor at Harvard University and lead author of the study.“
By landing on the middle or front of the foot, barefoot runners have almost no impact collision,” he said in a press release.
The merits of shoelessness are hotly debated in speciality magazines and online forums, and major manufacturers have started to make thin-as-skin shoes in anticipation of new markets.
But up to now, there has been little scientific evidence supporting the claim that barefoot is better.
Lieberman and colleagues helped fill this void by studying the gaits of three groups of runners in the US and Kenya: barefoot, shod, and those who had converted to shoeless running.“
Most people today think that barefoot running is dangerous and hurts, but actually you can run barefoot on the world’s hardest surfaces without the slightest discomfort and pain,” the study found.
But making the switch to barefoot running is not simply a matter of kicking off one’s shoes, the authors caution.
Running unshod or in so-called “minimal shoes” requires the use of different muscle groups. “
If you’ve been a heel-striker all your life, you have to transition slowly to build strength in calf and foot muscles,” Lieberman said.
The study, published in the British science journal Nature, also bolsters evidence suggesting the human foot evolved for rapid upright motion, said William Lungers, a professor at Stony Brook University Medical Centre in New York.“
Bipedalism – walking on two feet – has been around for millions of years, and we have been unshod for more than 99% of that time,” he said.
A radical reshaping of the foot about two million years ago, including shorter toes and a fully-arched foot, probably occurred to enhance our ability to move quickly over sustained periods.“
Our endurance running abilities may have evolved to enable our ancestors to engage in ‘persistence hunting’, the ability, in other words, to run down one’s prey,” he said. – AFP Source
IF RUNNING is your thing, you may want to throw away those pricey sports shoes and just do it barefoot, according to a study released recently.
Some three-quarters of runners who wear shoes land squarely on their heels – about 1,000 times for every mile run.
But even well-cushioned sports shoes that help distribute weight across the foot cannot fully absorb the shock of these blows: 30% to 75% of regular runners each year suffer repetitive stress injuries.
By contrast, the vast majority of unshod runners don’t hit the ground with their heels, landing instead on the sides or balls of their feet, the study found.
The practice is especially common in several East African countries where long-distance running is nearly a national past time.
In 1960, for example, a shoeless Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia won the 1960 Olympics marathon in record time.
By not ‘heel-striking’, barefoot runners avoid painful and potentially damaging impacts that concentrate the equivalent of two or three times one’s body weight onto a coin-sized surface.
“People who don’t wear shoes when they run have an astonishingly different strike,” said Daniel Lieberman, a professor at Harvard University and lead author of the study.“
By landing on the middle or front of the foot, barefoot runners have almost no impact collision,” he said in a press release.
The merits of shoelessness are hotly debated in speciality magazines and online forums, and major manufacturers have started to make thin-as-skin shoes in anticipation of new markets.
But up to now, there has been little scientific evidence supporting the claim that barefoot is better.
Lieberman and colleagues helped fill this void by studying the gaits of three groups of runners in the US and Kenya: barefoot, shod, and those who had converted to shoeless running.“
Most people today think that barefoot running is dangerous and hurts, but actually you can run barefoot on the world’s hardest surfaces without the slightest discomfort and pain,” the study found.
But making the switch to barefoot running is not simply a matter of kicking off one’s shoes, the authors caution.
Running unshod or in so-called “minimal shoes” requires the use of different muscle groups. “
If you’ve been a heel-striker all your life, you have to transition slowly to build strength in calf and foot muscles,” Lieberman said.
The study, published in the British science journal Nature, also bolsters evidence suggesting the human foot evolved for rapid upright motion, said William Lungers, a professor at Stony Brook University Medical Centre in New York.“
Bipedalism – walking on two feet – has been around for millions of years, and we have been unshod for more than 99% of that time,” he said.
A radical reshaping of the foot about two million years ago, including shorter toes and a fully-arched foot, probably occurred to enhance our ability to move quickly over sustained periods.“
Our endurance running abilities may have evolved to enable our ancestors to engage in ‘persistence hunting’, the ability, in other words, to run down one’s prey,” he said. – AFP Source
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