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Wheelchair Cushion Comparison Study: SAFETY

University of Michigan logo

University of Michigan

Status

Completed

Conditions

Healthy Adults
Stroke
Spinal Cord Injuries

Treatments

Device: Alternating air wheelchair cushion
Device: Static air cushion

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03430375
HUM00139020

Details and patient eligibility

About

Purpose: To examine the safety of the use of two wheelchair cushions for healthy individuals with intact sensation and individuals post stroke and spinal cord injury with impaired sensation. The new Ease Alternating Pressure wheelchair cushion will be compared to a static air cushion to examine interface pressure and skin responses in the areas of the buttock and posterior thighs when subjects sit without moving (static condition) and during upper extremity reaching activities (active condition). In addition, comfort, ease of transfer, and postural stability will be monitored while sitting on both cushions under both static and active conditions.

Full description

Twenty healthy adults (age range = 20 - 85 years) with intact buttock and bilateral posterior thigh sensation and intact skin integrity will be recruited. Twenty additional individuals (ages 20 - 85 years) with a history of stroke (n=10) and spinal cord injury (n=10) with documented sensory impairment, but intact skin integrity in the area of the buttock and posterior thighs will also be recruited. Individuals post-stroke will likely have impaired sensation on one side of their buttock & leg; whereas, individuals post-spinal cord injury will likely have impaired sensation bilaterally in the buttock and posterior thigh areas. The goal is to recruit equal numbers of males and females with a variety of body builds (height, weight, and body mass index) across the age range in both groups.

Procedures: In one 2 1/2 hour session, participants will a) sit still on [static condition] and b) perform the dynamic task of reaching in multiple directions [active condition] on the Ease alternating pressure cushion and on one static air cushion [randomized for order] for an estimated duration of one hour (32 minutes x two cushions) so that pressure mapping comparisons between cushions can be made. "The motion of the Ease cushions regularly shifts those points of pressure [every 3 minutes], and allows fresh blood to flow where the pressure has been lifted." Pressure mapping will capture the pressure amount, duration, and distribution of pressure between the skin of the buttock and posterior thighs and the wheelchair cushion surface. Documentation of the skin response (skin becomes pink, red, or blanches), and the participant's subjective opinions of comfort, ease of transfer, and postural stability will occur.

Enrollment

29 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 85 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Control: Healthy adults

  • no sensation or skin issues in the buttock or posterior thigh areas

Experimental groups: Diagnoses of stroke and spinal cord injury

  • Impaired or absent sensation in the unilateral or bilateral buttock and posterior thigh areas
  • No other reasons to have impaired sensation in the buttock and posterior thighs other than stroke or spinal cord injury (i.e. no peripheral nerve damage)
  • No current wounds or a history of wounds (past 6 months) involving the buttock, greater trochanters, or posterior thighs

Control and Experimental groups

  • Bilateral hips and knees: passive range of motion at least 90 degrees

Exclusion criteria

Control and Experimental groups - No self-reported cardiac, pulmonary, orthopedic, or neurological issues that would prevent sitting or performing reaching activities while sitting on the cushions for a one-hour total duration

Experimental group

  • No neurological diseases other than stroke or spinal cord injury

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

29 participants in 2 patient groups

Alternating air then static air cushion
Active Comparator group
Description:
The participants in all three populations or groups (healthy adults, adults with stroke, and adults with spinal cord injury) will first sit on the alternating air wheelchair cushion for 32 minutes and then the static air cushion for 32 minutes under two conditions (static: sitting without intentional moving) and (active: reaching with their upper extremity) while pressure mapping and skin responses are recorded. The Ease alternating air wheelchair cushion inflates/deflates which shifts the points of pressure \[every 3 minutes\] and allows fresh blood to flow where the pressure has been lifted. The Roho static air cushion is a common wheelchair cushion currently used for pressure relief purposes.
Treatment:
Device: Static air cushion
Device: Alternating air wheelchair cushion
Static air then alternating air cushion
Active Comparator group
Description:
The participants in all three populations or groups (healthy adults, adults with stroke, and adults with spinal cord injury) will first sit on the static air wheelchair cushion for 32 minutes and then the alternating air cushion for 32 minutes under two conditions (static: sitting without intentional moving) and (active: reaching with their upper extremity) while pressure mapping and skin responses are recorded. The Roho static air cushion is a common wheelchair cushion currently used for pressure relief purposes. The Ease alternating air wheelchair cushion inflates/deflates which shifts the points of pressure \[every 3 minutes\] and allows fresh blood to flow where the pressure has been lifted.
Treatment:
Device: Static air cushion
Device: Alternating air wheelchair cushion

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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