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A Randomised cross-over study to evaluate the physiological effects of internal air pressure changes in advanced support surface design

A Randomised cross-over study to evaluate the physiological effects of internal air pressure changes in advanced support surface design
A Randomised cross-over study to evaluate the physiological effects of internal air pressure changes in advanced support surface design
High specification mattresses periodically redistribute pressure using alternating air cells, offloading tissues. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of alternating air pressure gradients on sacral tissue physiology. This randomised cross-over study recruited 15 healthy participants to test the three mattress settings (fast cycle, normal cycle, and slow cycle). Participants were asked to adopt supine, lateral, and high sitting (head of bed at 40°) postures, whilst transcutaneous tissue gas tensions and interface pressures at the sacrum were continuously monitored. Comparison between mattress settings and postures showed no statistical difference (p > 0.05) between peak pressure index values at the sacrum for each air inflation cycle speed setting. By contrast, a significantly higher sacral (p < 0.05) contact area was observed for high sitting. During high sitting, ischemic responses during both fast and normal air inflation cycle speed settings were recorded. During the slow air inflation cycle speed, most participants (60%-100%) showed high levels of perfusion. The present study identified a main effect of posture on interface pressure and perfusion over the sacrum. The alternating mattress speed influenced local tissue perfusion, with the greatest changes in tissue oxygenation occurring in a high-speed setting.
Adult, Air Pressure, Beds, Cross-Over Studies, Equipment Design, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Posture/physiology, Pressure Ulcer/prevention & control, Young Adult, interface pressure, ischemia, pressure ulcer prevention, alternating air pressure matters, tissue perfusion
1742-4801
e70703
Caggiari, Silvia
58f49054-6ca6-429b-b499-49b93357e5ba
Toms, Martin
3ce77dc3-a7df-4305-a9ca-b98ed4ead2bc
Lucie, Rehorova
412b96a0-3138-4278-8221-86cbf6503eac
Evans, Zara
d5e4860b-8b0a-4d32-ba65-15bdbd0f29c2
Gordon, Ralph
00e4cfb1-43a6-4702-acd1-e6f2643f7531
Muckelt, Paul
29acdc93-a377-41ef-8d62-3ba65c90fa56
Mbithi, Florence
6bf4f420-1a97-4096-b73b-6ffc02b76a21
Filingeri, Davide
42502a34-e7e6-4b49-b304-ce2ae0bf7b24
Worsley, Peter R.
6d33aee3-ef43-468d-aef6-86d190de6756
Caggiari, Silvia
58f49054-6ca6-429b-b499-49b93357e5ba
Toms, Martin
3ce77dc3-a7df-4305-a9ca-b98ed4ead2bc
Lucie, Rehorova
412b96a0-3138-4278-8221-86cbf6503eac
Evans, Zara
d5e4860b-8b0a-4d32-ba65-15bdbd0f29c2
Gordon, Ralph
00e4cfb1-43a6-4702-acd1-e6f2643f7531
Muckelt, Paul
29acdc93-a377-41ef-8d62-3ba65c90fa56
Mbithi, Florence
6bf4f420-1a97-4096-b73b-6ffc02b76a21
Filingeri, Davide
42502a34-e7e6-4b49-b304-ce2ae0bf7b24
Worsley, Peter R.
6d33aee3-ef43-468d-aef6-86d190de6756

Caggiari, Silvia, Toms, Martin, Lucie, Rehorova, Evans, Zara, Gordon, Ralph, Muckelt, Paul, Mbithi, Florence, Filingeri, Davide and Worsley, Peter R. (2025) A Randomised cross-over study to evaluate the physiological effects of internal air pressure changes in advanced support surface design. International Wound Journal, 22 (6), e70703, [e70703]. (doi:10.1111/iwj.70703).

Record type: Article

Abstract

High specification mattresses periodically redistribute pressure using alternating air cells, offloading tissues. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of alternating air pressure gradients on sacral tissue physiology. This randomised cross-over study recruited 15 healthy participants to test the three mattress settings (fast cycle, normal cycle, and slow cycle). Participants were asked to adopt supine, lateral, and high sitting (head of bed at 40°) postures, whilst transcutaneous tissue gas tensions and interface pressures at the sacrum were continuously monitored. Comparison between mattress settings and postures showed no statistical difference (p > 0.05) between peak pressure index values at the sacrum for each air inflation cycle speed setting. By contrast, a significantly higher sacral (p < 0.05) contact area was observed for high sitting. During high sitting, ischemic responses during both fast and normal air inflation cycle speed settings were recorded. During the slow air inflation cycle speed, most participants (60%-100%) showed high levels of perfusion. The present study identified a main effect of posture on interface pressure and perfusion over the sacrum. The alternating mattress speed influenced local tissue perfusion, with the greatest changes in tissue oxygenation occurring in a high-speed setting.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 May 2025
Published date: June 2025
Additional Information: © 2025 The Author(s). International Wound Journal published by Medicalhelplines.com Inc and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: Adult, Air Pressure, Beds, Cross-Over Studies, Equipment Design, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Posture/physiology, Pressure Ulcer/prevention & control, Young Adult, interface pressure, ischemia, pressure ulcer prevention, alternating air pressure matters, tissue perfusion

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502103
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502103
ISSN: 1742-4801
PURE UUID: 7849e5b3-f413-491f-a8a1-454cc9e9e160
ORCID for Silvia Caggiari: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8928-2141
ORCID for Ralph Gordon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8441-9292
ORCID for Paul Muckelt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5995-881X
ORCID for Florence Mbithi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6103-7996
ORCID for Davide Filingeri: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5652-395X
ORCID for Peter R. Worsley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0145-5042

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Jun 2025 17:05
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 03:25

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Contributors

Author: Silvia Caggiari ORCID iD
Author: Martin Toms
Author: Rehorova Lucie
Author: Zara Evans
Author: Ralph Gordon ORCID iD
Author: Paul Muckelt ORCID iD
Author: Florence Mbithi ORCID iD

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