脚底的保护感觉。

S Robbins, G J Gouw, J McClaran, E Waked
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引用次数: 36

摘要

科学文献表明,赤脚活动可能是有益的。目前,儿童和成人的休闲赤脚活动以及运动员的赤脚跑步都是一种趋势。尽管身体大部分的皮肤类型(毛皮肤)似乎很容易受到疼痛的磨损负荷的伤害,但人们对足底感觉反馈提供的保护知之甚少,以防止赤脚运动时过度磨损造成的损伤。为了评估这一点,我们在5分钟的时间内对无毛和有毛的皮肤部位进行了35次疼痛的磨损,并在12名正常穿鞋的健康男性受试者中检查了其对皮肤损伤迹象的影响。与有毛的大腿皮肤相比,足底皮肤需要大约600%的摩擦负荷才能达到疼痛阈值。此外,疼痛刺激在刺激24小时后在所有受试者的毛皮肤部位产生明显的红肿和过敏,而只有8.3%的受试者报告过敏,1天后足底区没有出现红斑。我们发现足底皮肤比毛皮肤对摩擦刺激有更高的疼痛阈值。事实上,由于无法忍受的疼痛,足底区域的负荷被限制在无害的水平。我们的结论是,脚底皮肤很好地保护通过感觉反馈磨料损伤时赤脚。这些信息与先前的报告相结合表明,正常穿鞋的人赤脚运动时受伤的风险应该很低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Protective sensation of the plantar aspect of the foot.

The scientific literature suggests that barefoot activity may be beneficial. There is a current trend in recreational barefoot activity in children and adults, and barefoot running among athletes. Although the type of skin over most of the body (hairy skin) seems to be easily injured by painful abrading loads, little is known about protection provided by plantar sensory feedback against damage from excessive wear during barefoot locomotion. To evaluate this, we administered a volley of 35 painful abrading loads to glabrous and hairy skin sites over a 5-min period, and examined its effects for signs of cutaneous injury in a sample of 12 normally shod healthy male subjects. Compared with hairy skin of the thigh, plantar skin required approximately 600% greater abrading loads to reach pain threshold. Furthermore, painful stimulation produced visible redness and hypersensitivity in all subjects at the hairy skin site 24 hr after stimulation, whereas only 8.3% reported hypersensitivity and none showed erythema at the plantar area 1 day later. We found that plantar skin possesses a higher pain threshold to abrading stimuli than hairy skin. In fact, loading of the plantar area was limited to innocuous levels due to intolerable pain. We conclude that plantar skin is well protected through sensory feedback from abrasive injuries when barefoot. This information combined with previous reports suggests that risk of injury when normally shod individuals perform barefoot locomotion should be low.

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