Daily Observer (Jamaica)

STRESS FRACTURE?

Your foot hitting pavement wasn’t the main problem

-

IT starts as a persistent and irritating pain in the foot or lower leg, then it gets more intense, maybe with swelling, and soon a runner knows she’s being sidelined by one of the most common running injuries: A stress fracture.

These tiny cracks in the bone can halt training for months or even end a sports season.

A segment of the multibilli­on-dollar wearables industry aims to save potential victims from this fate, but a Vanderbilt University engineerin­g professor found a major problem: The devices are measuring the wrong thing.

Working with a local running club, an orthopaedi­c specialist who advises the

NFL Players Associatio­n and a team of Vanderbilt engineers, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineerin­g Karl Zelik, discovered that sensors only measuring the impact of the foot hitting pavement — which is what virtually all of them do — tell users little about the forces on bones that lead to stress fractures.

His research confirmed that the vast majority of force on the bone is actually from muscles contractin­g, not from the foot’s impact on the ground, a finding widely overlooked by both the wearables industry and many scientific studies.

Zelik’s research, appearing last week in the peer-reviewed journal PLOS One and titled “Ground reaction force metrics are not strongly correlated with tibial bone load when running across speeds and slopes: Implicatio­ns for science, sport and wearable tech”, offers the most clear and simple demonstrat­ion of the problems underlying the existing tools and prevailing methods for assessing bone stress and injury risk.

“We looked through the recent scientific literature, and we found that more than 50 scientific publicatio­ns each year report or interpret their results based on this incorrect assumption that ground reaction force is representa­tive of internal structure loading — the stress on bones and muscles inside the body,” said Zelik, a former college track and field standout. “Measuring ground reaction force may be convenient, but it’s the wrong signal.”

Wearable accelerome­ter and pressure sensors already on the market may help monitor bone stress injury risks, but only if they combine informatio­n about the ground reaction force and the force from muscles pulling against the bone. In general, you cannot assume that increases in ground reaction force indicate increases in bone stress, said Emily Matijevich, a mechanical engineerin­g PHD student in Zelik’s lab, and herself an avid runner.

Matijevich performed the lab work that the study outlines, testing 10 runners over a range of speeds and slopes.

“We used high-speed, motion-capture cameras to track runners’ movement and a special force-measuring treadmill to record the ground reaction force under their feet,” she said. “We then combined these signals using biomechani­cal algorithms to estimate the compressiv­e force experience­d by the tibia bone in the shank, a common place for stress fractures to occur. In nearly all cases, we found that the ground reaction forces were not strongly correlated with tibial bone loading.”

In several cases, lower ground reaction forces actually meant more stress on the tibia, a finding opposite of what most athletes believe and counter to how most existing wearables work.

This research began two years ago, when Vanderbilt University Assistant Professor of Orthopaedi­cs Leon Scott, who serves on the NFL Players Associatio­n’s health and safety committees, asked Zelik a simple question: Could wearable sensors be used effectivel­y to prevent the stress fractures Scott saw in his clinic every day?

Matijevich, Zelik and Scott are now exploring new ways to monitor bone stress non-invasively, and recently filed a patent applicatio­n for a system that fuses data from multiple wearable sensors to estimate tibia loading from both muscle contractio­ns and ground reaction forces. They’re seeking commercial partners to develop this new wearable tech and explore applicatio­ns to recreation­al runners, military cadets and elite athletes.

Scott said the combinatio­n of wearable sensors and new algorithms that the team is developing gives a far better picture of bone stress, with the potential to help runners lower their chance of injuries.

“There’s only so much you can do when the game is going, because those are high-speed injuries, but we can do something about stress fractures during training and conditioni­ng,” Scott said. “Right now, we don’t have great tools to tell us what’s happening to the bones other than experience and anecdote and these are, unfortunat­ely, failing quite a few people.”

 ??  ?? Research has confirmed that the vast majority of force on the bone while running is actually from muscles contractin­g, not from the foot’s impact on the ground.
Research has confirmed that the vast majority of force on the bone while running is actually from muscles contractin­g, not from the foot’s impact on the ground.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica