Exploring the effects of lateral pressure to the soft tissue of the buttocks during seating to preserve tissue perfusion

Pressure-ulcer occurrence in the seated patient is understudied. Preventative devices have been developed and are prescribed commonly, but there is little quantitative evidence of their effectiveness. This study explores the concept of a lateral pressure device, a prevention device that applies pres...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of tissue viability
Main Authors: Spiteri, Maegan, Boyle, Colin, Caggiari, Silvia, Christou, Alexandros, Savine, Louise, Worsley, Peter R., Masouros, Spyros
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 23-08-2024
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Summary:Pressure-ulcer occurrence in the seated patient is understudied. Preventative devices have been developed and are prescribed commonly, but there is little quantitative evidence of their effectiveness. This study explores the concept of a lateral pressure device, a prevention device that applies pressure to the sides of the seated buttocks, to reduce the amount of tissue distortion and blood-vessel occlusion. It is hypothesized that this device will reduce deep tissue injury by reducing the pressure at the bone-muscle interface, as demonstrated computationally in previous research. This study aimed to use oximetry to investigate the efficacy of the device in maintaining transcutaneous gas tensions of the tissue as close to baseline as possible. Oximetry electrodes were attached to participants' ischial tuberosity and greater trochanter for different amounts of lateral pressure. The amount of lateral pressure is a given percentage of the pressure due to the participants’ underbody pressure. The results show that 50 % lateral pressure is sufficient to produce an improvement in participants’ gas tensions at their ischial tuberosity, without negatively impacting the tissue at their greater trochanter, relative to the control of sitting with no application of lateral pressure. Despite a rudimentary prototype device design, and that participants each placed their own oximetry sensors, results support the application of lateral pressure as a method to maintain transcutaneous gas tensions. Further work should be carried out on a larger sample to consolidate these findings. •A novel device for pressure-ulcer prevention was explored.•The device applied lateral pressure to seated participants and gas tensions recorded.•Moderate levels of pressure maintained gas tensions in the buttocks.•Gas tensions on the tissue where lateral pressure was applied were unaffected.
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ISSN:0965-206X
DOI:10.1016/j.jtv.2024.08.004