Medical devices, such as non-invasive ventilation masks, save lives in health care settings but can be a cause of tissue injuries due to the pressure and shear loads on skin and soft tissue. These pressure injuries could be painful for the individual and cause a significant economic impact on healthcare providers. In the etiology of device related pressure ulcers, inflammation plays an important role.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: The aim was to investigate the relationship between microvascular function, cardiovascular risk profile, and subclinical atherosclerotic burden.
Methods And Results: The study enrolled 3809 individuals, 50-65 years old, participating in the population-based observational cross-sectional Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study. Microvascular function was assessed in forearm skin using an arterial occlusion and release protocol determining peak blood oxygen saturation (OxyP).
Significance: Knowledge of optical properties is important to accurately model light propagation in tissue, but reference data are sparse.
Aim: The aim of our study was to present skin optical properties from a large Swedish cohort including 3809 subjects using a three-layered skin model and spatially resolved diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (Periflux PF6000 EPOS).
Approach: Diffuse reflectance spectra (475 to 850 nm) at 0.
Objective: To evaluate microvascular function in women with previous hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP).
Design: Retrospective population-based cohort study.
Setting: Linköping, Sweden.
Background: Continuous positive airway pressure is a non-invasive therapy beneficial for patients with acute respiratory failure. The need for this therapy outside intensive care units is growing, but nurses face many challenges to enable this therapy in general medical wards.
Aims And Objectives: The aim of the study was to explore nurses' strategies for enabling continuous positive airway pressure therapy in a general medical ward context.
The objective of this study was to explore the associations between skin microcirculatory function and established cardiovascular risk factors in a large Swedish cohort. As part of the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS), microcirculatory data were acquired at Linköping University hospital, Linköping, Sweden during 2016-2017. The subjects, aged 50-64 years, were randomly selected from the national population register.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Impaired oxygenation in the skin may occur in disease states and after reconstructive surgery. We used tissue viability imaging (TiVi) to measure changes in oxygenation and deoxygenation of haemoglobin in an in vitro model and in the dermal microcirculation of healthy individuals.
Materials And Methods: Oxygenation was measured in human whole blood with different levels of oxygenation.
The objective of this study was to assess normative values for comprehensive forearm skin microcirculatory function: oxygen saturation, tissue fraction of red blood cells (RBCs), and speed-resolved perfusion. Furthermore, to examine the influence of age and sex on microcirculatory function. Measurements were performed using a noninvasive probe-based system, including diffuse reflectance spectroscopy and laser-Doppler flowmetry, yielding output data in absolute units.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study evaluated the long-term effectiveness of intra-articular temporomandibular joint arthrocentesis for patients with osteoarthritis and compared arthrocentesis/lavage alone with arthrocentesis/lavage and injected hyaluronic acid. Forty patients met the inclusion criteria, and 37 completed long-term follow-up (approximately 4 years). The patients were randomly allocated to two groups: arthrocentesis with lavage alone (A-group, n = 17) or combined with hyaluronic acid treatment (AS-group, n = 20).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have determined in vivo optical scattering properties of normal human skin in 1734 subjects, mostly with fair skin type, within the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study. The measurements were performed with a noninvasive system, integrating spatially resolved diffuse reflectance spectroscopy and laser Doppler flowmetry. Data were analyzed with an inverse Monte Carlo algorithm, accounting for both scattering, geometrical, and absorbing properties of the tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Endothelial function is important for regulating peripheral blood flow to meet varying metabolic demands and can be measured indirectly during vascular provocations. In this study, we compared the PAT finger response (EndoPAT) after a 5-minutes arterial occlusion to that from forearm skin comprehensive microcirculation analysis (EPOS).
Methods: Measurements in 16 subjects with varying cardiovascular risk factors were carried out concurrently with both methods during arterial occlusion, while forearm skin was also evaluated during local heating.
Skin and kidney microvascular functions may be affected independently in diabetes mellitus. We investigated skin microcirculatory function in 79 subjects with diabetes type 2, where 41 had microalbuminuria and 38 not, and in 41 age-matched controls. The oxygen saturation, fraction of red blood cells and speed-resolved microcirculatory perfusion (% red blood cells × mm/s) divided into three speed regions: 0-1, 1-10 and above 10 mm/s, were assessed during baseline and after local heating of the foot with a new device integrating diffuse reflectance spectroscopy and laser Doppler flowmetry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForearm skin hyperemia during release after brachial occlusion has been proposed for evaluating peripheral arterial disease and endothelial dysfunction. We used a novel fiberoptic system integrating Laser Doppler Flowmetry and Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy for a comprehensive pointwise model based microcirculation characterization. The aim was to evaluate and compare the temporal and the spatiotemporal variabilities in forearm skin microcirculation parameters (speed resolved perfusion; low speed <1mm/s, Perf; mid-speed 1-10mm/s, high speed >10mm/s, and total perfusion (Perf); the concentration and oxygenation of red blood cells, C and S).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To describe individual BF responses in a nursing home resident population for one-hour periods of bed rest.
Methods: BF was measured for one hour over the sacrum in 0° supine position and 30° supine tilt position in 25 individuals aged 65 y or older while lying on a pressure-redistributing mattress. Measurements were made at three tissue depths (1, 2, and 10 mm) using the noninvasive optical techniques, LDF and PPG.
The aim of this study was to investigate nursing staff induced repositionings and the patients' spontaneous movements during the day and night among older immobile patients in nursing care. Furthermore, the aim was to identify factors associated with the nursing staff induced repositionings and the patients' spontaneous movement frequency. An observational cross-sectional design was used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To characterize PIV and RH at different sacral tissue depths in different populations under clinically relevant pressure exposure.
Methods: Forty-two subjects (<65 years), 38 subjects (≥65 years), and 35 patients (≥65 years) participated. Interface pressure, skin temperature, and blood flow at tissue depths of 1, 2, and 10 mm (using LDF and PPG) were measured in the sacral tissue before, during, and after load in a supine position.
Background: Although repositioning is considered an important intervention to prevent pressure ulcers, tissue response during loading in different lying positions has not been adequately explored.
Aim: To compare the effects of different lying positions on interface pressure, skin temperature, and tissue blood flow in nursing home residents.
Method: From May 2011 to August 2012, interface pressure, skin temperature, and blood flow at three tissue depths were measured for 1 hr over the sacrum in 30° supine tilt and 0° supine positions and over the trochanter major in 30° lateral and 90° lateral positions in 25 residents aged 65 years or older.
Aim: To report a study to compare the effects of different lying positions on tissue blood flow and skin temperature in older adult patients. This article reports the evaluation of study design and procedures.
Background: To reduce risk of pressure ulcers, repositioning of immobile patients is a standard nursing practice; however, research into how different lying positions effect tissue microcirculation is limited.
Objective: The aim was to investigate the existence of sacral tissue blood flow at different depths in response to external pressure and compression in elderly individuals using a newly developed optical probe prototype.
Methods: The tissue blood flow and tissue thickness in the sacral area were measured during load in 17 individuals using laser Doppler flowmetry and photoplethysmography in a combined probe, and digital ultrasound.
Results: The mean age was 68.
Background/purpose: This study has evaluated a multi-parametric system combining laser Doppler flowmetry and photoplethysmography in a single probe for the simultaneous measurement of blood flow at different depths in the tissue. This system will be used to facilitate the understanding of pressure ulcer formation and in the evaluation of pressure ulcer mattresses.
Methods: The blood flow in the tissue over the sacrum was measured before, during and after loading with 37.