The purpose of this study was to monitor selected aspects of the three
-dimensional kinematics of the knee during walking with regular shoes
and with modified shoes that induced either pronation or supination of
the foot. Steinmann traction pins were inserted into the right tibia
and femur of five adult men who had apparently normal lower extremitie
s. Target clusters mounted onto the pins were filmed by four cine came
ras operating at 100 frames/sec. Two trials per subject were analyzed
for each of the three experimental conditions: regular running shoes?
running shoes with a 10 degrees valgus wedge, and running shoes with a
10 degrees varus wedge. The different types of footwear induced only
minor kinematic changes at the knee during the stance phase of walking
. The angular patterns of the tibiofemoral joint were modified by less
than 1 degrees, whereas the translatory patterns were altered by 2 mm
. Immediately following foot-strike, the valgus-wedge shoes caused the
tibia to rotate internally 4 degrees more than the varus-wedge shoes,
but at the tibiofemoral joint no consistent differences in the patter
n of internal-external rotation between normal and modified footwear w
ere measurable. These findings suggest that, in the healthy lower extr
emity, increased internal and external tibial rotation is resolved at
the hip joint, with changes at the tibiofemoral joint that barely are
detectable with the techniques used in this study.