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Associations between the size of individual plantar intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles and toe flexor strength
Author(s) -
Kusagawa Yuki,
Kurihara Toshiyuki,
Maeo Sumiaki,
Sugiyama Takashi,
Kanehisa Hiroaki,
Isaka Tadao
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/s13047-022-00532-9
Subject(s) - medicine , foot (prosody) , physical medicine and rehabilitation , plantar flexion , plantar pressure , flexor muscles , physical therapy , anatomy , ankle , system of measurement , physics , astronomy , philosophy , linguistics
Background The size of the plantar intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles has been shown to be associated with toe flexor strength (TFS). Previous studies adopted the size of limited plantar intrinsic foot muscles or a compartment containing several muscles as an independent variable for TFS. Among the plantar intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles, therefore, it is unclear which muscle(s) primarily contributes to TFS production. The present study aimed to clarify this subject. Methods In 17 young adult men, a series of anatomical cross‐sectional area of individual plantar intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles was obtained along the foot length and the lower leg length, respectively, using magnetic resonance imaging. Maximal anatomical cross‐sectional area (ACSA max ) and muscle volume (MV) for each constituent muscle of the plantar intrinsic foot muscles (flexor hallucis brevis; flexor digitorum brevis, FDB; abductor hallucis; adductor hallucis oblique head, ADDH‐OH; adductor hallucis transverse head, ADDH‐TH; abductor digiti minimi; quadratus plantae) and extrinsic foot muscles (flexor hallucis longus; flexor digitorum longus) were measured. TFS was measured with a toe grip dynamometry. Results TFS was significantly associated with the ACSA max for each of the ADDH‐OH (r = 0.674, p  = 0.003), ADDH‐TH (r = 0.523, p  = 0.031), and FDB (r = 0.492, p  = 0.045), and the MV of the ADDH‐OH (r = 0.582, p  = 0.014). As for the ADDH‐OH, the correlation coefficient with TFS was not statistically different between ACSA max and MV ( p  = 0.189). Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis indicated that ACSA max and MV of the ADDH‐OH alone explained 42 and 29%, respectively, of the variance in TFS. Conclusion The ADDH‐OH is the primary contributor to TFS production among the plantar intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles as the result of the stepwise multiple linear regression analysis.

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