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Foot ulceration: Hypotheses concerning shear and vertical forces acting on adjacent regions of skin

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42 Scopus citations

Abstract

During gait the plantar surface of the foot experiences distributed shear and compressive stresses due to tangential and vertical forces respectively. At any given point under a foot, the ratio of tangential/vertical forces gives a value (μRmin) for the minimum coefficent of friction required to prevent slipping. If μRmin is greater than the actual coefficient of friction (μA), then localized slipping will occur. Three possible scenarios exist which could lead to skin ulceration: at a localized area the skin may tend to slip (i) towards, (ii) away from or (iii) parallel to a neighboring skin region where μRmin ≤ μA (i.e. a region that doesn't slip). The first of these possibilities is similar in concept to the loading conditions that lead to a carpet becoming 'wrinkled', i.e. one region of the carpet slips towards another that is stationary. The second and third possibilities would tend to cause tearing in the carpet or shearing of its fabric respectively. In terms of skin breakdown the relative importance of each of these biomechanical hypotheses needs to be determined. © 1992.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)44-47
Number of pages4
JournalMedical Hypotheses
Volume40
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 1993

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