On September 25, 2002, the podiatric profession lost one of its most influential members, Dr. Merton L. Root. Dr. Root came to the fore of podiatry through his intense desire to develop a better taxonomy of the various foot types. He entered the profession after a serious study of many medical specialties because he felt that podiatry offered the best opportunities for research. During his student days, he quickly became disenchanted with the subjective methods by which feet were classified and felt that there had to be a better way. The Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus had a major impact on his development of the idea that a foot taxonomy was possible, and he proceeded to use the osseous skeleton as the basis of such a taxonomy. After graduation in 1952, he entered private practice and pursued an active course of making observations about various foot types and the problems they demonstrated. At that time, there were no generally accepted goniometric methods, so he was left to develop and experiment with various goniometric instruments and techniques. He continued to study the literature on the functional joints of the foot. It was during these first few years of his practice that J. H. Hicks published his first articles about the functional joints of the foot, which would have a major impact on Dr. Root’s thinking. Around 1955, he developed the concept of the subtalar joint neutral position, a totally new idea that would make it possible to establish a baseline for determining whether a foot was pronated or supinated.
Fifty years later, Dr. Root leaves behind only a handful of journal articles and three books. Yet some consider him the father of podiatric biomechanics and would argue that he has had a greater impact on the practice of podiatry than any other podiatrist in the last 50 years. Certainly there have been countless others who have left more writings. However, Dr. Root was the formulator of an entirely new postulate that now forms the basis of a significant part of podiatric practice throughout the world. His concept of a subtalar joint neutral position, deviation from which could be measured as a degree of flatfoot or cavus foot, was contrary to all prior teachings. A careful review of the literature shows that F. J. Cotton and R.W. Lovett put forth a similar idea in 1898; however, their concept did not seem to attract much attention and was not referred to in the literature in the first half of the twentieth century. What Dr. Root offered, though, was not only a definition of neutral, but also a classification of foot types relative to that definition. He taught that feet were not just pronated or supinated but that there was a continuum of abnormal function in either the pronation or supination direction. He also developed various algorithms for treating the problems related to the different foot types both conservatively and surgically.
Those who met him found Dr. Root to be almost indefatigable in his defense of ideas that he considered correct. However, he had enough humility to listen to and consider the opinions of people who disagreed with him. This author personally heard Dr. Root on several occasions express a willingness to adjust his thinking as research and sound deduction proved the value of new ideas. He never intended to be the final authority; rather, he wanted others to continue and improve on what he had started. One example of pushing others to do innovative things was the help his laboratory provided to Dr. Richard Blake in developing the Blake inverted orthotic technique. It has been noted by many that he had a great ability to motivate others to try a little harder to understand the workings of the human foot. Many of those who heard his lectures and studied his writings took on that challenge: Whether they agreed or disagreed with his ideas, all became more interested in understanding.
The Journal wishes to honor Dr. Root’s influence on the podiatric profession and help current and future generations remember his contributions and the attitudes that he tried to foster in encouraging the development of a real science of foot function. The article reprinted here is the first that he published in the Journal. Reading it, one gains not only information about foot function but also insight into the man who had a dream of what the podiatric profession could be. It is hoped that all who read the article will catch the spirit of that dream and carry it forward.