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Biomechanics

Effects of different percentages of body weight support on spatiotemporal step characteristics during running

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Pages 1441-1446 | Accepted 30 Sep 2017, Published online: 25 Oct 2017
 

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to determine the effect of different percentages of body weight support (BWS) on spatiotemporal step characteristics during running. 26 endurance runners (age: 37 ± 9 years) completed a running treadmill protocol consisting of 6 different conditions (BWS combinations: 0–50%), with velocity maintained at 12 km/h. Each condition lasted 1 minute. Step angle, ground contact time (CT), flight time (FT), step length (SL) and frequency (SF), and duration of phases during stance time (phase1: initial contact; phase2: midstance; phase3: propulsion) were measured for every step during the test using a photoelectric cell system. Compared with the baseline condition (100% BW), FT was longer, CT was shorter, SL was longer, SF was lower, and the step angle was higher with each increase in BWS (p < 0.05). Also, some changes were observed in the duration of phases during stance time: phase1 did not experience changes across experimental conditions (p = 0.096), phase2 decreased and phase3 increased as BW was supported (p < 0.05). These results indicate that as BW was supported, runners showed longer FT and SL, shorter CT, lower SF, and greater step angle as well as some changes in the phases during the ground contact. Therefore, this study highlights the effect of different percentages of BWS on spatiotemporal parameters.

Acknowledgments

This paper is part of the thesis of the first author Roche-Seruendo LE. The thesis plan is registered in the PhD program in Biomedicine (B11/56/1) of Universidad de Granada (Granada, Spain). The authors would like to thank all the athletes who participated in the research and Fisio-Zaragoza for facilitating installation and resources without any interest.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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