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Lateral pressure equalisation as a principle for designing support surfaces to prevent deep tissue pressure ulcers

Author

Listed:
  • Colin J Boyle
  • Diagarajen Carpanen
  • Thanyani Pandelani
  • Claire A Higgins
  • Marc A Masen
  • Spyros D Masouros

Abstract

When immobile or neuropathic patients are supported by beds or chairs, their soft tissues undergo deformations that can cause pressure ulcers. Current support surfaces that redistribute under-body pressures at vulnerable body sites have not succeeded in reducing pressure ulcer prevalence. Here we show that adding a supporting lateral pressure can counter-act the deformations induced by under-body pressure, and that this ‘pressure equalisation’ approach is a more effective way to reduce ulcer-inducing deformations than current approaches based on redistributing under-body pressure. A finite element model of the seated pelvis predicts that applying a lateral pressure to the soft tissue reduces peak von Mises stress in the deep tissue by a factor of 2.4 relative to a standard cushion (from 113 kPa to 47 kPa)—a greater effect than that achieved by using a more conformable cushion, which reduced von Mises stress to 75 kPa. Combining both a conformable cushion and lateral pressure reduced peak von Mises stresses to 25 kPa. The ratio of peak lateral pressure to peak under-body pressure was shown to regulate deep tissue stress better than under-body pressure alone. By optimising the magnitude and position of lateral pressure, tissue deformations can be reduced to that induced when suspended in a fluid. Our results explain the lack of efficacy in current support surfaces and suggest a new approach to designing and evaluating support surfaces: ensuring sufficient lateral pressure is applied to counter-act under-body pressure.

Suggested Citation

  • Colin J Boyle & Diagarajen Carpanen & Thanyani Pandelani & Claire A Higgins & Marc A Masen & Spyros D Masouros, 2020. "Lateral pressure equalisation as a principle for designing support surfaces to prevent deep tissue pressure ulcers," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 15(1), pages 1-19, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0227064
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227064
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