Mode of action

Mode of action

The arches of the feet, which are normally held upright by muscles and ligaments, are slack and the arches sink as a result. As a result, the base of the contact surface of our body changes. When one or both of the arches of the foot drop, a chain reaction will automatically set in in the joints above and in the spine in order to ensure a reasonably upright posture. This chain reaction will be reflected in the affected muscles and cause tension, which will result in neck pain, back pain, knee or hip problems or constant muscle injuries, for example in sports.

But even a causal knee problem, such as a meniscus injury or hip pain, will change your gait pattern over time and thus the stress on the foot and its shape. A person's footprints can be read like a map of their anatomical well-being.
Tackling a problem actively is always better than just trying to resolve it passively.

In today's medicine there is an increasing tendency to use active measures. The conventional plaster cast for torn ligaments at the ankle, for example, is now largely provided with splints or functional bandages to prevent “muscle wasting”. After each operation, active exercise and stress is started as soon as possible, because passivity will make our muscles inactive and change our posture. Physiotherapy instructs the patient to move in a "new" way. The back school teaches how to use posture in different areas of life in a way that is gentle on the back. These are learning processes that take their time. Sensorimotor insoles can accelerate these processes and automate new movements.

By activating or inhibiting the affected muscle chains, the body can be brought back into a harmonious balance. Tense muscles relax, slack muscles regain tension.

By using these sensorimotor insoles in training or therapy, incorrect posture manifested in the brain can be reprogrammed in a much shorter time, so that a faster optimization of the body statics can be achieved. And that, in the truest sense of the word, “step by step”.

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