MULTI-PLUG DESIGN SHOE INSOLE
An insole is provided for reducing peak plantar pressure on a foot. The insole includes a compressible pad having a plurality of holes extending from a bottom surface of the compressible pad and partially through the compressible pad. A plurality of compressible plugs is disposed in the plurality of holes, wherein the plurality of compressible plugs has a stiffness that is different than a stiffness of the compressible pad. The plurality of compressible plugs is concentrated in a reduced stiffness portion of the compressible pad that substantially corresponds to an area of peak plantar pressure on the foot.
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This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application 60/957,238 filed Aug. 22, 2007, which is hereby incorporated in its entirety.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCHThis invention was made with Government support under contract 2R01 (HD036895-04A1) awarded by the U.S. National Institute for Health, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development and National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research.
APPENDIXNot Applicable.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is in the field of therapeutic footwear and specifically relates to the design of insoles that may be custom-formed or mass-produced.
2. Related Art
High peak plantar pressures (PPP) during walking can contribute to painful forefoot syndromes, such as metatarsalgia, in otherwise healthy people, and to skin breakdown in people with conditions such as diabetes and peripheral neuropathy. Peripheral neuropathy is a common underlying cause of foot ulcers in the diabetic patient because the lack of painful feedback allows unnoticed repetitive tissue injury to occur. During walking, normal and shear stresses develop which may lead to serious damage in the neuropathic foot. Normal stresses originate by the repetitive vertical pressure on the foot while shear stresses occur when deep tissue slides under superficial tissue.
Some previous insole designs have attempted to reduce PPP by providing single plugs that are softer than the surrounding insole and that penetrate the full thickness of the insole. However, when a single soft plug is inserted through an insole, the softer material is in direct contact with the foot, which may create localized high PPP because of the stiffness discontinuity at the boundary between the softer plug and the rest of the insole. Such designs also lack flexibility to be able to distribute high, damaging pressure in a custom and specific manner.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is a therapeutic insole having a compressible pad with multiple compressible plugs disposed therein. The compressible plugs are preferably arranged within the compressible pad to reduce PPP and to limit the occurrence of secondary pressure peaks arising at the boundary regions between materials having different stiffnesses. Optimal plug configurations may be determined by various methods such as numerical analysis, empirical testing, and/or combinations of the two. Generic insoles for the general population could be developed based on the typical pressure distribution of the foot, and the insole designs of the present invention can be applied to footwear for the general population as well as persons who suffer from conditions which cause foot pain.
Further areas of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiment of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following description of the preferred embodiment(s) is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses.
As illustrated in
The compressible pad 22 may be constructed of any suitable material, and may be designed to provide cushioning to all or a portion of the bottom surface of a foot F. The plugs 26 may also be constructed of any suitable material providing a desired stiffness.
As shown in
The plugs 26 may be arranged within the compressible pad 22 according to various configurations. The plugs 26 may also be many different shapes and sizes. Preferably the plugs 26 are cylindrical and have a diameter D in the range of approximately one to six millimeters, which would result in a range of horizontal cross-sectional areas of approximately one to twenty-nine square millimeters. In the exemplary embodiment, the plugs 26 are spaced approximately one to five millimeters apart. Accordingly, it will be appreciated that plugs 26 of different shapes would have effective diameters equivalent to the circular shape to produce corresponding plug areas. However, it is not required that the plugs 26 be cylindrical. Preferably, the plugs 26 are sized, shaped and configured within the compressible pad in a manner that reduces peak plantar pressures (PPP) while limiting the occurrence of secondary pressure peaks, such as those that may arise at boundaries between regions of varying stiffness.
In one embodiment, shown in
Various methods may be used to determine optimal arrangements of the plugs 26 within the compressible pad 22. One such method is numerical analysis, or more specifically finite element analysis. According to an exemplary numerical analysis, the structure of a foot F used for a finite element model is generated from Spiral X-ray Computed Tomography (SXCT) image data acquired while a subject is seated in a loading device and a load of fifty percent of body weight is applied to the forefoot. Boundary coordinates are preferably extracted from the SXCT data using an Analyze software system and the pressure distribution is preferably measured using an F-Scan system (Tekscan, South Boston, Mass.) with a pressure sensor taped to the plantar aspect of the subject's foot F.
According to this analysis, the structure of the foot F is characterized by bone, cartilage, flexor tendon, fascia and tissue.
The linear elastic material properties used in this exemplary analysis are E=7300 MPa for bones, E=10 MPa for cartilage, E=15 MPa for a flexor tendon, and E=85 MPa for fascia. Muscle and fat may be grouped into a single material type (tissue) with nonlinear elastic properties characterized by the strain energy density function:
According to this equation, W is the strain energy density, WL is the linear strain energy, C is a constant, e is the base of the natural logarithm, [D] is the linear stiffness matrix and {ε} is the strain tensor. This strain energy density function depends on three parameters: E (slope of the one-dimensional stress-strain curve at ε=0), ν (Poisson's ratio), and C (constant with units of length2/force). The values preferably used for the material coefficients are E=0.30 MPa, C=60 MPa−1, ν=0.45.
Nonlinear material properties are preferably specified for the standard TCI (#2 plastizote), the plugs (Poron®) and shoe sole (rubber). The material properties for the rubber and plastizote may be obtained by compression testing of samples taken from the shoe sole and compressible pad 22 utilizing an Instron testing machine (Wilson Instruments, Canton, Mass.) and following the procedures described in the ASTM standard D575-91, while those of Poron® may be obtained from literature.
For the TCI and plugs 26, a 5-parameter nonlinear material description is preferably used, characterized by the slope of the initial linear portion (E), the Poisson's ratio (v), the strain at the end of the linear range (ε1), the slope of a second linear region (Et), the starting point on the second linear part of the stress-strain relationship given by the strain (ε2) and the corresponding stress (σ2). The stress-strain law is linear for strains less than ε1 and for strains greater than ε2. The two linear segments may be joined by a cubic spline. In this exemplary analysis the following values are used for the #2 plastizote: E=1.75 MPa, Et=0.0175 MPa, ε1=0.046, ε2=0.2, σ2=0.105 MPa, v=0.2, and Poron®: E=0.80 MPa, Et=0.13 MPa, ε1=0.031, ε2=0.1, σ2=0.05 MPa, v=0.3. For the shoe sole, the strain energy density function set forth above was used with values: E=1.25 MPa, C=25 MPa−1, ν=0.45.
In the present numerical model, a compression load is applied to the tibia and a moment is added to incorporate the compensating effect of the Achilles tendon (not included in the model). Furthermore the flexor tendon is preferably pre-stressed to represent typical values for the Flexor Digitorum Longus during push-off.
A finite element mesh density is preferably selected to capture the topological complexity of the model and frictionless contact condition may be specified between the foot F and the TCI. According to this analysis, the elements representing the TCI are directly connected to those representing the sole of the shoe, and the shoe is supported with a compression-only elastic foundation (no friction) with an elastic constant selected to represent the stiffness of the support plate in the loading device. Plane strain conditions may be assumed.
The numerical solution is obtained by increasing the polynomial degree of elements (p-level) on a fixed mesh. Preferably a sequence of contact solutions is obtained for several p-levels until the estimated relative error in energy norm is small (under 2%), followed by a nonlinear analysis to incorporate the effects of material nonlinearities and subsequent modification of the contact. For the model validation, the pressure distribution for the barefoot and standard condition footwear of a subject may be obtained from the FEA model and compared with the pressure distribution obtained from the F-Scan system.
As noted above, the F-Scan pressure recording is preferably made while the subject is sitting in the loading device and applying a load of 50% of body weight to their forefoot. It is intended that the forefoot pressure distribution collected with the subject sitting on the loading device be similar to the forefoot pressure distribution at the push-off phase of walking (80% of stance phase).
According to this exemplary analysis, in order to determine an optimal TCI design, the numerical analyses are repeated modifying the TCI by inserting a number of Poron® plugs 26 of different sizes. The results of each numerical TCI alteration can be compared with those obtained using a standard TCI without any plugs 26 to determine which design provides the greatest PPP reduction while limiting secondary pressure peaks.
Designs of plug configurations optimized by FEA may be further validated and compared with other designs by empirical testing. According to an exemplary method for empirically testing such designs, a set of insoles is constructed to fit a first test subject (47 years old, 165 lb), with a history of forefoot pain (metatarsalgia), and a second test subject with a history of diabetes and peripheral neuropathy (68 years old, 176 lb, 44 years of DM). Both subjects experience high localized pressures in the forefoot.
First, a custom TCI insole 20 of standard plastizote material, about 10-mm thick in the region of the metatarsal heads MH, is made to fit both the left and right feet of each subject. A certified pedorthist and orthotist then takes a foam impression of a subject's foot F to make a positive plaster model of their foot F. The foam is preferably compressed 2-4 cm to capture the entire impression of the foot F and medial longitudinal arch. The TCI is preferably made from a base of 1.27 cm (½″) #2 plastizote with a shore value of approximately 35 and heightened to include the medial longitudinal arch fabricated to fit inside the shoe.
According to this exemplary method, a trial in-shoe pressure assessment using an F-Scan system is then performed with the subjects wearing the unmodified standard TCI and standard shoes. From the F-scan pressure reading corresponding to the late stance phase of walking (the highest pressure in the forefoot region as shown in
Two additional patterns are also tested according to this exemplary method: one in which soft plugs 26 are placed throughout the entire forefoot region, as shown in
According to this exemplary method, plantar pressures are recorded during walking in all 4 insole conditions: no plugs 26, localized plugs 26 (
Table 1 below shows the average PPP for the four different regions of the forefoot (as shown in
The PPP and standard deviation (STD) values are averages over 18 steps. The last column in each region shows the percent change in pressure (ΔP) over that of the TCI alone (a positive number indicates a pressure increase, while a negative number a reduction in pressure). While each of the designs reduce PPP in the middle region (where initial PPP is highest and the subject had a history of pain) these results show that the local plug 26 is the most effective in reducing the PPP in this targeted region (13.6% reduction from 427 kPa to 369 kPa). The local plug design also shows a reduction of PPP in the medial region of 11.4%, with a small increase in pressure in the lateral and great toe regions (4.6% and 3%, respectively).
Table 2 below shows the same information obtained for the second subject according to this exemplary method.
In the case of the second subject, the global plug and the local plug designs show a reduction in the PPP occurring in the middle and lateral regions (3.3-24.5%), while the inlay is not effective. There is a pressure increase in the great toe and medial regions for all three plug configurations, but the pressure for the standard TCI is less than in the other two regions.
Table 3 below shows a summary of the PPP for the middle region of the forefoot from the F-Scan measurements for the two subjects and for the four different TCI conditions. The change in pressure (ΔP) is indicated for each case, and both subjects show decrease in the PPP for the two plug designs.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention, plugs 26 of varying stiffnesses are inserted into different regions of the compressible pad 22, as opposed to those embodiments discussed above in which the stiffness of the plugs 26 is uniform. As shown in
As various modifications could be made to the exemplary embodiments, as described above with reference to the corresponding illustrations, without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the foregoing description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative rather than limiting. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
It will also be appreciated that insoles 20 with standardized plug designs can be designed and mass-produced for the general population based on typical pressure distributions of the foot F. Accordingly, for such standardized plug designs, the analysis of typical pressure distributions may be made by a similar finite element model methodology or any other suitable experimental or empirical technique. Generally, typical patterns of the plug designs are substantially circular and/or oval shapes having an effective diameter of approximately thirty to forty millimeters. However, the shape of a particular plug design pattern may be irregular if the peak plantar pressures are irregular. Also, it should be appreciated that the plug design patterns can be used to alleviate pressure anywhere in the foot F. Although the forefoot is the most common location, the plugs 26 can be used to redistribute pressure in other regions of the foot F, such as at the heel.
Claims
1. An insole for reducing plantar pressure on a portion of a foot, the insole comprising:
- a compressible pad having a stiffness;
- a plurality of holes disposed within said compressible pad; and
- a plurality of compressible plugs disposed in said plurality of holes, said plurality of compressible plugs having a different stiffness than said compressible pad.
2. The insole of claim 1, wherein each of said compressible plugs has a cross-sectional area in a transverse plane of approximately one to twenty-nine square millimeters, wherein said plurality of compressible plugs are substantially cylindrical, and wherein said each of said compressible plugs has an effective diameter of approximately 1 mm to 6 mm.
3. The insole of claim 1, wherein said plurality of holes are spaced approximately one to five millimeters apart.
4. The insole of claim 1, wherein said plurality of holes and said plurality of compressible plugs are concentrated in a reduced stiffness portion of said compressible pad.
5. The insole of claim 1, wherein each said hole extends from a bottom surface of said compressible pad and partially through said compressible pad.
6. The insole of claim 5, wherein each said hole extends from said bottom surface of said compressible pad through approximately fifty to eighty percent of a thickness of said compressible pad.
7. The insole of claim 1 further comprising a plurality of stiffer compressible plugs disposed in a plurality of holes peripheral to the reduced stiffness portion of said compressible pad, wherein said plurality of stiffer compressible plugs are stiffer than said plurality of compressible plugs
8. The insole of claim 1, wherein said compressible pad comprises a reduced stiffness portion that corresponds to an area of peak plantar pressure on the foot, and the plurality of compressible plugs is disposed within the reduced stiffness portion.
9. The insole of claim 8, wherein said reduced stiffness portion is disposed in a forefoot portion of said compressible pad.
10. The insole of claim 9, wherein said reduced stiffness portion of said compressible pad is positioned under a metatarsal head of the foot.
11. The insole of claim 1, wherein said plurality of compressible plugs is arranged locally in a region of said compressible pad corresponding to an area of peak pressure on the foot.
12. An insole for reducing peak plantar pressure on a foot, the insole comprising:
- a compressible pad having a plurality of holes extending from a bottom surface of said compressible pad and partially through said compressible pad;
- a first plurality of compressible plugs having a stiffness greater than a stiffness of said compressible pad and disposed in a plurality of holes peripheral to a reduced stiffness portion of said compressible pad; and
- a second plurality of compressible plugs having a stiffness that is less than the stiffness of said compressible pad and disposed in a plurality of holes throughout said reduced stiffness portion of said compressible pad.
13. The insole of claim 12, wherein said plurality of compressible plugs are arranged in a substantially circular or oval pattern having a center that substantially corresponds to the center of an area of peak plantar pressure on the foot.
14. The insole of claim 13, wherein said of said pattern is positioned substantially under a metatarsal head of the foot.
15. The insole of claim 12, wherein said compressible plugs are substantially cylindrical.
16. The insole of claim 12, wherein each said hole extends from said bottom surface of said compressible pad through approximately fifty to eighty percent of a thickness of said compressible pad.
17. A method of reducing peak plantar pressure on a foot, said method comprising:
- providing a compressible pad having a plurality of holes extending therethrough;
- providing a plurality of compressible plugs disposed in the plurality of holes, the plurality of compressible plugs having a stiffness that is different than a stiffness of the compressible pad; and
- analyzing the foot to facilitate determining an optimal arrangement of the compressible plugs to create a reduced stiffness portion of the compressible pad.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the optimal arrangement of the compressible plugs in the reduced stiffness portion relieves peak plantar pressure on the foot while avoiding substantial secondary pressure peaks.
19. The method of claim 17, wherein analyzing the foot further comprises positioning a subject in a sitting position with approximately half of the subject's weight on the subject's foot, and positioning a sensor on the plantar portion of the foot and wherein determining an optimal arrangement of the compressible plugs further comprises providing plugs having different stiffnesses.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein determining an optimal arrangement of the compressible plugs further comprises arranging a first plurality of plugs around a periphery of the reduced stiffness portion of the compressible pad, and arranging a second plurality of plugs within the reduced stiffness portion of the compressible pad.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 22, 2008
Publication Date: Aug 4, 2011
Applicant: THE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY (St. Louis, MO)
Inventors: Ricardo Actis (Chesterfield, MO), Lilana Ventura (Chesterfield, MO), Michael Jeffrey Mueller (St. Louis, MO), Paul Kevin Commean (Olivette, MO), Mary Kent Hastings (Kirkwood, MO), Joseph W. Klaesner (Creve Coeur, MO), Donovan J. Lott (Newberry, FL), Thomas Kurt Pilgram (University City, MO), Kirk Smith (Ballwin, MO), Dequan Zou (Wildwood, MO)
Application Number: 12/674,605