CORRELATION OF FOOT POSTURE AND ANKLE INJURY INCIDENCE IN INDIAN FENCERS
Yaashi Anand Mehta, Dr. Aishwarya Kanhere (PT)
TMV’s Indutai Tilak college of Physiotherapy, Pune, Maharashtra
Abstract
Background: Fencing is an intermittent, high-intensity sport with frequent lower-limb loading and an elevated incidence of ankle injuries. Foot alignment (pronation/supination) may alter load distribution and predispose athletes to ankle pathology.
Objective: To examine the relationship between static foot posture, quantified by the Foot Posture Index (FPI-6), and ankle injury incidence in Indian competitive fencers.
Methodology: Observational study of 40 competitive fencers (age 18–25) recruited from a fencing academy in Pune (purposive sampling). Baseline FPI was measured for left and right feet according to standard procedures; athletes were followed monthly for four months to record ankle injuries. Statistical analysis included descriptive statistics and Pearson correlation between mean FPI and injury incidence.
Results: Sample: 16 males, 24 females. Overall mean FPI = 1.36 (SD 2.75), indicating a mild pronation tendency. Categorical distribution (feet): neutral 45% (n=36), pronated 47.5% (n=38), supinated 7.5% (n=6). During follow-up 11 athletes (27.5%) sustained injuries; most injuries occurred in the 18–21 age group. Pearson’s r between mean FPI and ankle injury incidence = 0.36 (t = 2.37, p = 0.023), indicating a moderate positive association.
Conclusion: Pronated foot posture was moderately associated with increased ankle injury risk in this cohort. Baseline FPI screening and targeted interventions (proprioception, intrinsic foot/calf strengthening, orthotic consideration) are recommended for injury prevention.
Keywords: Foot Posture Index, Ankle Injury, Fencing, Pronation, Injury Prevention.
Journal Name :
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EPRA International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (IJMR)
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Published on : 2026-01-12
| Vol | : | 12 |
| Issue | : | 1 |
| Month | : | January |
| Year | : | 2026 |