ZVONAŘ, Martin and Kateřina KOLÁŘOVÁ. CASE STUDY: VERIFYING THE EFFECT OF SPECIFIC ORTHOPAEDIC INSOLES AND BIOMECHANICAL SHOES ON PLANTAR PRESSURE. In Dragan Milanović, Goran Sporiš. 7th International Scientific Conference on Kinesiology, 2014, Opatija, Croatia. Opatija: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Kinesiology, Croatia, 2014, p. 221-226. ISBN 978-953-317-014-5.
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Basic information
Original name CASE STUDY: VERIFYING THE EFFECT OF SPECIFIC ORTHOPAEDIC INSOLES AND BIOMECHANICAL SHOES ON PLANTAR PRESSURE
Authors ZVONAŘ, Martin (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution) and Kateřina KOLÁŘOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution).
Edition Opatija, 7th International Scientific Conference on Kinesiology, 2014, Opatija, Croatia, p. 221-226, 6 pp. 2014.
Publisher University of Zagreb, Faculty of Kinesiology, Croatia
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Proceedings paper
Field of Study Sport and leisure time activities
Country of publisher Croatia
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form storage medium (CD, DVD, flash disk)
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14510/14:00076197
Organization unit Faculty of Sports Studies
ISBN 978-953-317-014-5
Keywords in English orthopaedic insoles; biomechanical shoes; plantography
Tags rivok
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Ing. Jana Smítalová, učo 40472. Changed: 24/3/2017 12:44.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present specific orthopaedic insoles and biomechanical shoes manufactured in the Czech Republic in cooperation with Faculty of Sport Studies and, most importantly, objective data which were obtained during analyzing the effect of the orthopaedic means on distribution of plantar pressure in two selected probands. Immediate effect on the sole inside the shoe was measured through plantographic insoles; long-term effect on a bare foot was measured on a plantographic platform. The results of the proband, who was testing orthopaedic insoles and the one who was testing biomechanical shoes, were quite different. With orthopaedic insoles, both plantographic methods proved majority of the proclaimed positive effects, whereas the effects of biomechanical shoes were both positive and negative. A common feature was immediate reaction towards a change, which is positively manifested only after long-term use.
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