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Correlation of medial longitudinal arch height with postural stability, sensory integration, balance and fall risk among healthy young adults
Author(s):
1. Sameera Gul: Foundation University College of Physical Therapy (FUCP), Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan.
2. Hafiza Noor ul Huda: Foundation University College of Physical Therapy (FUCP), Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan.
3. Misha Raza: Foundation University College of Physical Therapy (FUCP), Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan.
4. Muhammad Osama: Foundation University College of Physical Therapy (FUCP), Foundation University, Islamabad, Pakistan.
Abstract:
A cross-sectional analytical study was conducted on 165 healthy young adults. With pes rectus and pes planus to correlate the medial longitudinal arch height with postural stability, sensory integration of balance and fall risk. Persons with pes cavus, congenital foot anomalies other than pes planus, leg length discrepancies, recent history of trauma, lower limb amputations, history of serious foot injury, ligamentous laxity, or an active infl ammatory disorder were excluded. Outcome measurements included normalised truncated navicular height (NTNH), Chippaux Smirak index (CSI), athletic single leg stability (ASLS) index, fall risk (FR) index, postural stability (PS), clinical test of sensory integration of balance (CTSIB), and balance error scoring system (BESS). Spearman correlation and Mann Whitney U test were used for data analysis. CSI and NTNH were noted to have no signifi cant correlation (p<0.05) with PS, FR, CTSIB, ASLS and BESS among healthy young adults. Males were observed to have poorer balance and fall risk as compared to females.
Page(s): 2242-2246
Published: Journal: Journal of Pakistan Medical Association, Volume: 73, Issue: 11, Year: 2023
Keywords:
Balance , Postural balance , Flat foot , Pes planus , Postural stability , Flat feet
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