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The effect of interventions anticipated to improve plantar intrinsic foot muscle strength on fall‐related dynamic function in adults: a systematic review
Author(s) -
Willemse Lydia,
Wouters Eveline J. M.,
Bronts Henk M.,
Pisters Martijn F.,
Vanwanseele Benedicte
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of foot and ankle research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.763
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 1757-1146
DOI - 10.1186/s13047-021-00509-0
Subject(s) - medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , physical therapy , gait , rehabilitation , psychological intervention , balance (ability) , population , foot (prosody) , dynamic balance , linguistics , philosophy , physics , environmental health , quantum mechanics , psychiatry
Background The plantar intrinsic foot muscles (PIFMs) have a role in dynamic functions, such as balance and propulsion, which are vital to walking. These muscles atrophy in older adults and therefore this population, which is at high risk to falling, may benefit from strengthening these muscles in order to improve or retain their gait performance. Therefore, the aim was to provide insight in the evidence for the effect of interventions anticipated to improve PIFM strength on dynamic balance control and foot function during gait in adults. Methods A systematic literature search was performed in five electronic databases. The eligibility of peer‐reviewed papers, published between January 1, 2010 and July 8, 2020, reporting controlled trials and pre‐post interventional studies was assessed by two reviewers independently. Results from moderate‐ and high‐quality studies were extracted for data synthesis by summarizing the standardized mean differences (SMD). The GRADE approach was used to assess the certainty of evidence. Results Screening of 9199 records resulted in the inclusion of 11 articles of which five were included for data synthesis. Included studies were mainly performed in younger populations. Low‐certainty evidence revealed the beneficial effect of PIFM strengthening exercises on vertical ground reaction force (SMD: − 0.31‐0.37). Very low‐certainty evidence showed that PIFM strength training improved the performance on dynamic balance testing (SMD: 0.41–1.43). There was no evidence for the effect of PIFM strengthening exercises on medial longitudinal foot arch kinematics. Conclusions This review revealed at best low‐certainty evidence that PIFM strengthening exercises improve foot function during gait and very low‐certainty evidence for its favorable effect on dynamic balance control. There is a need for high‐quality studies that aim to investigate the effect of functional PIFM strengthening exercises in large samples of older adults. The outcome measures should be related to both fall risk and the role of the PIFMs such as propulsive forces and balance during locomotion in addition to PIFM strength measures.

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