Barefoot-running enthusiasts long have believed that running without
shoes or in minimalist footwear makes running easier, speedier and less
injurious. But a surprisingly large number of new studies examining just
how the body actually responds when we run in our birthday shoes or
skimpy footwear suggest that for many people, those expectations are not
being met.
Consider, for instance, the findings of the most definitive of the new studies, published last month in The Journal of Applied Physiology.
It looked into whether landing near the front of the foot when you run
is more physiologically efficient than striking the ground first with
the heel.
This is a central issue in any discussion of barefoot-style running,
because one of the supposed hallmarks of running shoeless or in
minimalist footwear is that doing so promotes a forefoot landing.
Without the heel cushioning provided by standard running shoes, barefoot
proponents say, runners will gravitate naturally toward landing lightly
near the balls of the feet.
And they should, most proponents add, because landing near the front
of the foot will require less oxygen and effort and allow you to push
harder at any given speed and ultimately run faster or longer.
But that idea, while appealing, has not been well scrutinized. So
researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst recruited 37
experienced runners, 19 of whom were habitual heel-strikers and 18 of
whom landed first near the front of the foot. (Heel striking is far more
common than forefoot striking among modern runners, by most estimates,
with at least 70 percent of us nowadays leading with our heels.)
The researchers began by outfitting all of the volunteers with the
same neutral running flats and then having each run on a treadmill as he
or she normally would, using his or her preferred foot strike. The
volunteers ran at three different speeds, equivalent to an easy,
middling and fast pace. Throughout, the researchers measured oxygen
uptake, heart rates and, through mathematical calculations, the extent
to which carbohydrates were providing energy.
Then, in a separate experiment, they asked each runner to switch
styles — the heel-strikers were to land near the balls of their feet and
the forefoot strikers with their heels — while the researchers gathered
the same data as before.
In the end, this data showed that heel-striking was the more
physiologically economical running form, by a considerable margin. Heel
strikers used less oxygen to run at the same pace as forefoot strikers,
and many of the forefoot strikers used less oxygen — meaning they were
more economical — when they switched form to land first with their
heels.
Most of the runners also burned fewer carbohydrates as a percentage
of their energy expenditure when they struck first with their heels.
Their bodies turned to fats and other fuel sources, “sparing” the more
limited stores of carbohydrates, says Allison Gruber, a postdoctoral
fellow at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who led the study.
Because depleting carbohydrates results in “hitting the wall,” or
abruptly sagging with fatigue, “these results tell us that people will
hit the wall faster if they are running with a forefoot pattern versus a
rear-foot pattern,” Dr. Gruber says.
These findings undermine some of the entrenched beliefs about
minimalist shoes or barefoot running, but they jibe closely with the
conclusions of multiple studies presented last week at the annual meeting of the American College of Sports Medicine
in Indianapolis. Five separate studies there found no significant
benefits, in terms of economy, from switching to minimalist,
barefoot-style footwear.
The news on injury prevention and barefoot-style running is likewise
sobering. Although many barefoot-style runners believe that wearing
lightweight shoes or none at all toughens foot muscles, lessening the
likelihood of foot-related running injuries, researchers at Brigham
Young University did not find evidence of that desirable change. If foot
muscles become tauter and firmer, the scientists say, people’s arches
should consequently grow higher. But in a study also presented at the
sports medicine meeting, they found no changes in arch height among a
group of runners who donned minimalist shoes for 10 weeks.
Other researchers who presented at the meeting had simply asked a
group of 566 runners if they had tried barefoot-style shoes and, if so,
whether they liked them. Almost a third of the runners said they had
experimented with the minimalist shoes, but 32 percent of those said
that they had suffered injuries that they attributed to the new
footwear, and many had switched back to their previous shoes.
None of this new science, of course, proves that barefoot-style
running is inadvisable or disadvantageous for all runners; it proves
only that the question of whether barefoot is best is not easily
answered. “There are lots of individual instances where people report
that change” from one type of running shoes or running form to another
“was good for them,” says Rodger Kram, a professor of integrative
physiology at the University of Colorado at Boulder, who’s long studied
running form. “There are also lots of cases of people switching or
trying to switch who got hurt.”
The primary lesson of the accumulating new science about
barefoot-style running, he says, is that “the biomechanics of running
are not simple, and generic proclamations” — like claims that all
runners will benefit from barefoot-style shoes and running form — “are
surely incorrect.”
Dr. Gruber agrees. “I always recommend that runners run the way that
is most natural and comfortable for them,” she says. “Each runner runs a
certain way for a reason, likely because of the way they were
physically built. Unless there is some indication that you should change
things, such as repeated injury, do not mess with that plan.”
Source New York Times By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
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