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Infrared thermography applied to lower limb muscles in elite soccer players with functional ankle equinus and non-equinus condition
Author(s) -
David RodríguezSanz,
Marta Elena LosaIglesias,
Daniel LópezLópez,
César CalvoLobo,
Patricia PalomoLópez,
Ricardo Vallejo
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.3388
Subject(s) - ankle , tibialis anterior muscle , achilles tendon , plantar flexion , medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , ankle dorsiflexion , treadmill , leg muscle , anatomy , tendon , physical therapy , skeletal muscle
Gastrocnemius-soleus equinus (GSE) is a foot-ankle complaint in which the extensibility of the gastrocnemius (G) and soleus muscles (triceps surae) and ankle are limited to a dorsiflexion beyond a neutral ankle position. The asymmetric forces of leg muscles and the associated asymmetric loading forces might promote major activation of the triceps surae, tibialis anterior, transverses abdominal and multifidus muscles. Here, we made infrared recordings of 21 sportsmen (elite professional soccer players) before activity and after 30 min of running. These recordings were used to assess temperature modifications on the gastrocnemius, tibialis anterior, and Achilles tendon in GSE and non-GSE participants. We identified significant temperature modifications among GSE and non-GSE participants for the tibialis anterior muscle (mean, minimum, and maximum temperature values). The cutaneous temperature increased as a direct consequence of muscle activity in GSE participants. IR imaging capture was reliable to muscle pattern activation for lower limb. Based on our findings, we propose that non-invasive IR evaluation is suitable for clinical evaluation of the status of these muscles.

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