Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Head Over Heels

Heels can cause many the accidental trip or slip here are some reports of heels in the news:



The Independent : High Heel Injuries Cost £29m a Year.


Injuries to feet from wearing high heels cost the nation £29m a year to put right, according to figures out today.

Operations and medical procedures to correct damaged feet can cost sufferers thousands of pounds a time, the report says.

A league table of high heel-induced injuries shows that bunion removal can cost £4,000 a time and £10.5m is spent on this procedure each year.

Toe straightening, the most common procedure, can cost £1,200 each time and £10.4m is spent on this every 12 months.

Big toe joint replacement is also costly at £4,000 a time, adding up to £3.3m over a year.

Corns account for 12 per cent of high heel injuries, and with treatment costing £800 a time, this costs the nation £2.9m per annum.

Removal of trapped nerves can cost £2,000 to carry out, amounting to £2m a year, while ingrowing toenails cost £250 to treat and £200,000 is spent on this every 12 months.

The study of 1,000 women, funded by shoe company MBT, found that those living in Liverpool and Manchester were most likely to suffer from wearing heels, with 45 per cent wearing them every day.

It also found that 42 per cent of the women surveyed reported having some kind of accident in their heels, with twisted ankles and falling over the most common mishaps.

Emma Supple, consultant podiatrist for the MBT Academy, said: "While we all love our high heels, wearing them for prolonged periods is bad news for our health and our wallets.

"We need to mix and match our choice of footwear to allow our bodies time to recover."

She urged women to consider a more balanced "diet" of shoe wear.



BBC News Health : High Heels Shrink Calf Muscle Fibres


UK researchers say they have uncovered why women who often wear high heels can find it painful to wear flat shoes.

Scans of the calf muscles in a group of frequent heel wearers found muscle fibres were, on average, 13% shorter than in those who avoided high heels.

The Journal of Experimental Biology study also found high heels led to stiffer tendons in the calf.

Some time spent in flatter footwear as well as stretching exercises would help to combat the effect, experts said.

Anecdotally it has long been said that regularly wearing high heels shortens the calf muscle.

Study leader Professor Marco Narici, from Manchester Metropolitan University, said in the 1950s secretaries who wore high heels complained that they struggled to walk flat-footed when they took their shoes off.

But no-one has looked at what is actually happening in the muscle.

From a group of 80 women, the team selected 11 volunteers who had regularly worn 5cm heels for two years or more and who felt uncomfortable walking flat-footed.

An MRI scan showed that there was no difference in the size of the calf muscles in the heel wearers compared with a group of women who wore flat shoes.

But an ultrasound scan revealed that the muscle fibres were indeed shorter in the women who wore heels.

Stiff calves

When the women were asked to lie on their front on a couch, the researchers noticed that the angle of the heel in the stiletto wearers was greater due to their shortened calf.

In the final part of the study, they found that the high-heel wearers' tendons were much thicker and stiffer than in those who stuck to flat shoes.

This causes discomfort when walking on flat feet because the tendon cannot stretch sufficiently, Professor Narici said.

Yet he does not think women need to give up their high heels.

"Fashion is intended to be uncomfortable and none of the women in the study planned to give up their high heels," he said.

"We want to give practical advice and I would recommend just doing a few stretching exercises to counteract some of these changes."

He said one useful tip was for high heel wearers to stand on tip toes on a step, and using a handrail for balance to lower their heels as far as they can before raising them up again.

Sammy Margo, physiotherapist and spokesperson for the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, said the study backed what they suspected.

"The advice we would give is not to wear heels or flat shoes all the time but to wear a variety of heel heights to get the calf muscles working through the greatest range of movement.

"But I can't say we are seeing a higher incidence of calf problems in women who wear high shoes."


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