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The Effect of Dimple Insole Design on the Plantar Temperature and Pressure in People with Diabetes and in Healthy Individuals

Zequera, Martha; Almenar-Arasanz, Alejandro J.; Alfaro-Santafé, Javier; Allan, David; Anaya, Andrés; Cubides, Mauricio; Rodríguez, Natalia; Salazar, Cesar; Naemi, Roozbeh

The Effect of Dimple Insole Design on the Plantar Temperature and Pressure in People with Diabetes and in Healthy Individuals Thumbnail


Authors

Martha Zequera

Alejandro J. Almenar-Arasanz

Javier Alfaro-Santafé

David Allan

Andrés Anaya

Mauricio Cubides

Natalia Rodríguez

Cesar Salazar



Contributors

Yih-Kuen Jan
Editor

Chi-Wen Lung
Editor

Ben-Yi Liau
Editor

Manuel E. Hernandez
Editor

Abstract

An increase in plantar pressure and skin temperature is commonly associated with an increased risk of diabetic foot ulcers. However, the effect of insoles in reducing plantar temperature has not been commonly studied. The aim was to assess the effect of walking in insoles with different features on plantar temperature. Twenty-six (F/M:18/8) participants—13 with diabetes and 13 healthy, aged 55.67 ± 9.58 years—participated in this study. Skin temperature at seven plantar regions was measured using a thermal camera and reported as the difference between the temperature after walking with an insole for 20 m versus the baseline temperature. The mixed analyses of variance indicated substantial main effects for the Insole Condition, for both the right [Wilks’ Lambda = 0.790, F(14, 492) = 4.393, p < 0.01, partial eta squared = 0.111] and left feet [Wilks’ Lambda = 0.890, F(14, 492) = 2.103, p < 0.011, partial eta squared = 0.056]. The 2.5 mm-tall dimple insole was shown to be significantly more effective at reducing the temperature in the hallux and third met head regions compared to the 4 mm-tall dimple insole. The insoles showed to be significantly more effective in the diabetes group versus the healthy group, with large effect size for the right [Wilks’ Lambda = 0.662, F(14, 492) = 8.037, p < 0.000, Partial eta-squared = 0.186] and left feet [Wilks’ Lambda = 0.739, F(14, 492) = 5.727, p < 0.000, Partial eta-squared = 0.140]. This can have important practical implications for designing insoles with a view to decrease foot complications in people with diabetes.

Citation

Zequera, M., Almenar-Arasanz, A. J., Alfaro-Santafé, J., Allan, D., Anaya, A., Cubides, M., …Naemi, R. (2024). The Effect of Dimple Insole Design on the Plantar Temperature and Pressure in People with Diabetes and in Healthy Individuals. Sensors, 24(17), 5579. https://doi.org/10.3390/s24175579

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 22, 2024
Online Publication Date Aug 28, 2024
Publication Date Aug 28, 2024
Deposit Date Sep 9, 2024
Publicly Available Date Sep 11, 2024
Journal Sensors
Electronic ISSN 1424-8220
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 24
Issue 17
Article Number 5579
Pages 5579
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/s24175579

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