Litcius/Paper detail

Clinical Application of Gait Retraining in the Injured Runner

Logan W. Gaudette, Molly M. Bradach, José Roberto de Souza Júnior, Bryan C. Heiderscheit, Caleb D. Johnson, Joshua Posilkin, Mitchell J. Rauh, Lauren K. Sara, Lindsay Wasserman, Karsten Hollander, Adam S. Tenforde

2022Journal of Clinical Medicine25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite its positive influence on physical and mental wellbeing, running is associated with a high incidence of musculoskeletal injury. Potential modifiable risk factors for running-related injury have been identified, including running biomechanics. Gait retraining is used to address these biomechanical risk factors in injured runners. While recent systematic reviews of biomechanical risk factors for running-related injury and gait retraining have been conducted, there is a lack of information surrounding the translation of gait retraining for injured runners into clinical settings. Gait retraining studies in patients with patellofemoral pain syndrome have shown a decrease in pain and increase in functionality through increasing cadence, decreasing hip adduction, transitioning to a non-rearfoot strike pattern, increasing forward trunk lean, or a combination of some of these techniques. This literature suggests that gait retraining could be applied to the treatment of other injuries in runners, although there is limited evidence to support this specific to other running-related injuries. Components of successful gait retraining to treat injured runners with running-related injuries are presented.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRetrainingPhysical medicine and rehabilitationGaitTrunkPhysical therapyBiomechanicsCadencePatellofemoral pain syndromeAlternative medicineEcologyInternational tradePathologyBusinessBiologyPhysiologyLower Extremity Biomechanics and PathologiesDiabetic Foot Ulcer Assessment and ManagementFoot and Ankle Surgery