Abstract

Background: Schoolchildren often spend a lot of time carrying a backpack with school equipment, which can be very heavy. The impact a backpack may have on the pronated feet of schoolchildren is unknown. Aims: The objective of this study was to evaluate the association of the backpack use on static foot posture in schoolchildren with a pronated foot posture over 36 months of follow-up. Methods: This observational longitudinal prospective study was based on a cohort of consecutive healthy schoolchildren with pronated feet from fifteen different schools in Plasencia (Spain). The following parameters were collected and measured in all children included in the study: sex, age, height, weight, body mass index, metatarsal formula, foot shape, type of shoes, and type of schoolbag (non-backpack and backpack). Static foot posture was determined by the mean of the foot posture index (FPI). The FPI was assessed again after 36 months. Results: A total of 112 participants used a backpack when going to school. Over the 36-month follow-up period, 76 schoolchildren who had a static pronated foot posture evolve a neutral foot posture. Univariate analysis showed that the schoolchildren using backpacks were at a greater risk of not developing neutral foot (odds ratio [OR]: 2.09; 95% CI: 1.08–4.09). The multivariate analysis provided similar results, where the schoolchildren using a backpack (adjusted OR [aOR]: 1.94; 95% CI: 1.02–3.82) had a significantly greater risk of not developing a neutral foot posture. Conclusions: A weak relationship was found between backpack use and schoolchildren aged from five to eleven years with static pronated feet not developing a neutral foot posture over a follow-up period of 36 months.

Highlights

  • Introduction published maps and institutional affilIn Spain, backpacks are widely used among schoolchildren

  • The objective of this study is to evaluate the association of the backpack use on static foot posture in schoolchildren with a pronated foot posture over 36 months of follow-up

  • Based on the univariate analysis, the schoolchildren using backpacks had an increased risk of not developing a static neutral foot posture

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Summary

Introduction

In Spain, backpacks are widely used among schoolchildren They often spend a lot of time carrying a backpack with school equipment that includes books, pencils, laptops, calculators, sports uniforms, water bottles, etc., which can be very heavy. It has been shown that excessive loads increase the force and pressure under different foot areas [8], and they are the major factor influencing changes in gait patterns [9,10]. Both dynamic and static gait postural changes have been detected with external loads of more than twenty percent of the child’s corporal weight [11]

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