Recovery shoes, sandals, and slip-ons are supposed to reduce post-running aches and stiffness, and speed recovery. Okabashi, Superfeet, Oofos, Hoka One One, and other companies make footwear featuring huge, foamy footbeds and exaggerated soles. The shoes have an athletic-meets-orthopedic look that is, at best, dorky. And if they work, maybe looks don’t matter. But the evidence that they do is somewhat patchy.
The 6 Best Ways to Recover From Your Workout
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The Science There’s some promising research. Oofos says it uses foam that absorbs 37 percent more impact than traditional foam footwear materials and has an arch design that reduces ankle exertion by up to 20 percent; however, that data comes from a brand-sponsored University of Virginia lab study. Also, shoes with unstable rocker soles—in this case, MBT sneakers—were shown to enhance recovery in lower leg and thigh muscles from damage induced by marathon running, according to a 2018 study published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports. The Verdict “There’s really no good scientific research that shows these shoes make a difference,” says Steven Neufeld, M.D., a foot and ankle surgeon at the Centers for Advanced Orthopaedics in Falls Church, Virginia. Part of the issue is there’s no real way to measure “recovery,” says Mark Cucuzzella, M.D., a professor at the West Virginia University School of Medicine and director of the Natural Running Center. “The shoes may correlate with recovery, but there’s no certain causal relationship.”
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This is not to say these companies are taking advantage of our recovery-obsessed fitness culture, because force placed on feet obviously matters. It’s a question of biomechanics. “These shoes are trying to absorb the stress that’s distributed across the foot when walking,” Neufeld says. In reality, it’s your entire lower body—including hips, ankles, knees, Achilles tendons, and foot tissue and arches—which is designed to deal with the force off the ground and take pressure off feet. “Having an inch of foam plays a very small role compared with that,” Cucuzzella says. Regardless of what the science says, these shoes are like walking on clouds, which, for many of us, is all the justification needed after covering serious mileage. Who cares if you look a little dorky?
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Recovery shoes, sandals, and slip-ons are supposed to reduce post-running aches and stiffness, and speed recovery. Okabashi, Superfeet, Oofos, Hoka One One, and other companies make footwear featuring huge, foamy footbeds and exaggerated soles. The shoes have an athletic-meets-orthopedic look that is, at best, dorky. And if they work, maybe looks don’t matter. But the evidence that they do is somewhat patchy.
The 6 Best Ways to Recover From Your Workout
Read article
The Science
There’s some promising research. Oofos says it uses foam that absorbs 37 percent more impact than traditional foam footwear materials and has an arch design that reduces ankle exertion by up to 20 percent; however, that data comes from a brand-sponsored University of Virginia lab study. Also, shoes with unstable rocker soles—in this case, MBT sneakers—were shown to enhance recovery in lower leg and thigh muscles from damage induced by marathon running, according to a 2018 study published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports.
The 6 Best Ways to Recover From Your Workout
Read article
The 6 Best Ways to Recover From Your Workout
The Verdict
“There’s really no good scientific research that shows these shoes make a difference,” says Steven Neufeld, M.D., a foot and ankle surgeon at the Centers for Advanced Orthopaedics in Falls Church, Virginia.
Part of the issue is there’s no real way to measure “recovery,” says Mark Cucuzzella, M.D., a professor at the West Virginia University School of Medicine and director of the Natural Running Center. “The shoes may correlate with recovery, but there’s no certain causal relationship.”
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This is not to say these companies are taking advantage of our recovery-obsessed fitness culture, because force placed on feet obviously matters. It’s a question of biomechanics. “These shoes are trying to absorb the stress that’s distributed across the foot when walking,” Neufeld says. In reality, it’s your entire lower body—including hips, ankles, knees, Achilles tendons, and foot tissue and arches—which is designed to deal with the force off the ground and take pressure off feet. “Having an inch of foam plays a very small role compared with that,” Cucuzzella says.
Intensify Your Core and Shred Your Abs With This Easy $9 Workout Hack
Read article
Intensify Your Core and Shred Your Abs With This Easy $9 Workout Hack
Regardless of what the science says, these shoes are like walking on clouds, which, for many of us, is all the justification needed after covering serious mileage. Who cares if you look a little dorky?
For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!
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