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Podcast 143: Future of movement, Running Cadence and more.

The Gait Guys Podcast

Release Date: 01/19/2019

*NEW: Occult ankle injuries and other tidbits show art *NEW: Occult ankle injuries and other tidbits

The Gait Guys Podcast

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*NEW: Split treadmills, limping and prioprioception. show art *NEW: Split treadmills, limping and prioprioception.

The Gait Guys Podcast

Velocity, timing, stance and swing phases, injuries, center of pressure, step width, .... lots of good topics today

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*NEW: How to get started with a client show art *NEW: How to get started with a client

The Gait Guys Podcast

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NEW:  Hips, Hops and Limb Spin show art NEW: Hips, Hops and Limb Spin

The Gait Guys Podcast

This time around we introduce some new literature to provoke some clinical thinking that will inform, amuse and hopefully entertain you.  We also introduce the newest athletic tape to the market, surely someone will rip off our idea, but hopefully they will tag our name to it and help make us famous.

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*NEW: Case studies and clinical thinking. show art *NEW: Case studies and clinical thinking.

The Gait Guys Podcast

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Pod: Foot muscles, core strength and more show art Pod: Foot muscles, core strength and more

The Gait Guys Podcast

Podcast 169: Foot muscles, core strength and more Join us each month on the Masterclass in Gait, link below Join at the $40 monthly level and get the masterclass each month, bonus material and the detailed monthly content we only share on Patreon. The Masterclass is a formal LIVE presentation of slides, videos, demos, deep dives on topics you will not hear anywhere but here ! We hit the gait, biomechanics, neurology and orthopedics of all of the gait topics we present. This is not for the weak and timid, this is the deep dive you have been waiting for. Join us while we turn our normal 50...

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Gait Speed, hip extension, and A New Dawn show art Gait Speed, hip extension, and A New Dawn

The Gait Guys Podcast

Great round up of topics today, and a New Dawn

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Is symmetry important for biomechanics and energy utilization? show art Is symmetry important for biomechanics and energy utilization?

The Gait Guys Podcast

Podcast 167:  Is symmetry important for biomechanics and energy utilization? Plus, things that mimic plantar fasciitis; Including trigger points you never thought might  be implicated.   Join us each month on the Masterclass in Gait,  link  below Join at the $40 monthly level and get the masterclass each month, bonus material and the detailed monthly content we only share on Patreon. The Masterclass is a formal LIVE presentation of slides, videos, demos, deep dives on topics you will not hear anywhere but here ! We hit the gait, biomechanics, neurology and...

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Podcast 166: Senile Degeneration of afferent mechanoreceptors. show art Podcast 166: Senile Degeneration of afferent mechanoreceptors.

The Gait Guys Podcast

Deep dive orthopedic, neurologic, biomechanical nerd talk, again.

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Chronic Ankle Problems: Neurologic effects in functional ankle instability show art Chronic Ankle Problems: Neurologic effects in functional ankle instability

The Gait Guys Podcast

Long for talk this time around some central themes in ankle instability with deep discussion on the functional neurology and biomechanics, and of course, how to get around some of the problems.

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More Episodes

The future of human movement control ?
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-01-01/zuckerberg-funds-wireless-mind-control-using-game-changing-brain-implants

Really interesting study: in-race cadence data from world 100K champs. Fatigue matters less than expected;
https://www.outsideonline.com/2377976/stop-overthinking-your-running-cadence?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=onsiteshare

A new study shows a majority (82%) of adolescent patients presenting with FAI syndrome can be managed nonoperatively, with significant improvements in outcome scores at a mean follow-up of two years: ow.ly/GXtC30n49nc pic.twitter.com/dyr4f6pEOU

Gait Rehab
https://academic.oup.com/ptj/article/88/12/1460/2742171
" Rehabilitation of gait in PSP should also include oculomotor training because the ability to control eye movements is directly related to the control of gait and safe ambulation. Vision plays a critical role in the control of locomotion because it provides input for anticipatory reactions of the body in response to constraints of the environment. Anticipatory saccades occur normally in situations that involve changing the direction of walking17 or avoiding obstacles.18 When downward saccades are not frequently generated during obstacle avoidance tasks, there is an increase in the risk for falling. Di Fabio et al19 reported that elderly people at a high risk for falling generated fewer saccades than their low-risk counterparts during activities involving stepping over obstacles. In addition, foot clearance trajectories were asymmetric in the high-risk group, with the lag foot trajectory being significantly lower than the lead foot trajectory. Similar behavior has been observed in patients with PSP during stair-climbing activities. Di Fabio et al20 recently reported that patients with severe oculomotor limitations had a lower lag foot trajectory than those with mild oculomotor limitations. "

Eye movements:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4932064/
" The content of the eye movement program was as follows: First, a picture card was shown to the patient, and then mixed with 20 other cards and spread face up on the desk. The patient was instructed to find that one card. This task was repeated approximately 20 times. Second, the therapist moved a baton slowly while drawing curves and the patient was instructed to keep his or her gaze fixed on the tip of the baton. In this task, the distance between the baton and the patient was maintained at approximately 1 m and the task was performed for approximately five minutes. Third, the patient was instructed to shake his or her head laterally as quickly as possible and a letter card with letters written upside down was presented to the patient to read. This task was repeated approximately 10 times. Fourth, the therapist moved a baton slowly from a point approximately 5 cm away from the patient to a point approximately 50 cm away and the patient was instructed to keep his or her eyes on the baton. This task was performed for approximately five minutes. The experimental group underwent eye movement training while the control group underwent gait training for 20 minutes per session, five times per week for six months in total."

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3259492/

Plantar fascia loads higher when forefoot striking . . . .
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0021929018308959
Foot arch deformation and plantar fascia loading during running with rearfoot strike and forefoot strike: A dynamic finite element analysis
Tony Lin-WeiChen et al


High pronation was associated with 20-fold higher odds of injury than neutral foot posture
Association between the Foot Posture Index and running related injuries: A case-control study
AitorPérez-Morcillo et al
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0268003318304303