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How can the stimulation of plantar cutaneous receptors improve postural control? Review and clinical commentary
Postural control requires constant and subconscious postural sway to manage balance and achieve postural stability. These movements of regulation are based in particular on cutaneous plantar information. The foot constitutes a functional whole that participates in the mechanisms of postural control...
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Published in: | Neurophysiologie clinique 2019-06, Vol.49 (3), p.263-268 |
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creator | Viseux, Frederic Lemaire, Antoine Barbier, Franck Charpentier, Pascal Leteneur, Sebastien Villeneuve, Philippe |
description | Postural control requires constant and subconscious postural sway to manage balance and achieve postural stability. These movements of regulation are based in particular on cutaneous plantar information. The foot constitutes a functional whole that participates in the mechanisms of postural control and regulation. It represents the direct interface between the body and the ground during quiet standing, and plantar cutaneous information contributes to postural control. Upright balance mechanically depends on the gravitational torque produced by the forces of gravity and reaction of the ground. In this context, the foot behaves like a sensory system for postural regulation whose objective is to maintain a state of stability within a changing and constraining environment. There is a relation between balance improvement and the facilitation of sensory feedback related to the activation of the plantar cutaneous mechanoreceptors. From a clinical point of view, the application of additional tactile cues may have therapeutic benefits in relation to fall prevention, or to improve specific types of chronic pain. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.neucli.2018.12.006 |
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source | ScienceDirect Journals |
subjects | Additional thickness Afferent Pathways - physiology Balance Chronic pain Cutaneous afferent Feedback, Sensory - physiology Feet Foot - physiology Foot sole Humans Life Sciences Mechanoreceptors Mechanoreceptors - physiology Postural Balance - physiology Postural control Posture Standing Position |
title | How can the stimulation of plantar cutaneous receptors improve postural control? Review and clinical commentary |
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