/pseudo gimp central topic
Extertional Compression Syndromes and Related Pathologies Explained
As a ski boot liner packs out, we skiers needing to get better control, will tighten the boot further.
A few times a week I'll get skiers and boarders who are having pain at the front of the ankle- it can be anywhere from the lower shin to passing through the tibiotalar joint to the talonavicular joint. The “upper instep”... so to speak.
I talked with a guy last night who had not missed a day of the season. I have numerous friends racking up 100+ days of skiing for the year- far in excess of the 80 or so I have.
What I am getting at is that liners, and to lesser extent shells, have a finite life span. There are only so many engineering cycles in a given material. At a point the liner gets played out and can't handle, or adequately distribute, the pressures required for good skiing. While skiers in racey stock liners routinely get 150+ days from a stock liner, the industry standard is far less- around 25-40 days of real skiing for a boot in the “performance” category.
So bro homeslice wants more control, but is too broke to shell out bread for liners at this late point in the season, so he aggressively tightens his boot even more. What he is risking here is called a “compartment syndrome”. In sports med, this is called an “exertional compartment syndrome”. Visible or non-visible swelling may appear. It will be painful.
With socks off, take your heel and put it on your toe. Either heel, doesn't matter. Try to lift the toe. Feel how the tendons raise where your foot meets your leg?
Those are your Extensor Tendons. They flex thousands of times a day in a ski boot and take a beating. When your liner is shot, there is not sufficient padding to distribute pressure. Bruising or repetitive microtrauma can occur. As the tongue of the boot wraps around this area and the padding fades away, there is little left to protect this area/distribute forces.
Too much shell pressure because the liner is trashed... This area is susceptible to point pressure.
Once irritated, this area will take at least a week to calm down, maybe more. You may or may not see bruising. It will be tender to the touch and hurts flexing these muscles- mostly the tibialis anterior.
In addition to packed out liners, I attribute the problem to boots with less forward lean. Boots like Garmont Shaman and the Lange RS 130 have less forward lean making it easier to be in the back seat. Of course skiing in the back seat can cause an extertional compartment syndrome, but I'm talking about good skiers here. A bad landing or being forced into the back seat by a bump can happen too.
Skis with reverse camber/forefoot rocker/early rise are being skied in a more neutral position. Skier stance has changed. I place more emphasis on rear/mid foot control in the boot. It's very easy to strain this complex area.
Packed out stock liners and crusty old intuition liners are chief catalysts. As Intuition liners get packed out they seem to loose most of their mojo in the anterior ankle/instep.
A heel lift can give some relief. Removing any material from ankle wraps in the Achilles area will bring the skier a little further back. On a side note, when firming up a boot, I almost never put a full ankle wrap on a liner. I will only place medial and/or lateral c-pads. If I need to take up that space, I'll use Bontex or other custom cut pads. Careful with the Bontex as it takes up volume, but elevates the the foot. Good skiers and boarders hate Eliminator Pads as they adversely affect stance and balance. Custom cut padding that's thinner works better.
Grinding away some of the plastic on the lower tongue will really help, but then you've permanently modified the boot and when the swelling goes away, you're screwed by the extra volume you created.
Proceed as necessary.
Actual mileage may vary.
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