Spinal Cord Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pilot Study on the Use of Adhesive Elastic Taping as "add-on" Treatment for the Therapy of Medium/Severe Grade Pressure Ulcers in Spinal Cord Injured Patients
All patients with a significant deficiency of skin sensitivity and reduced mobility are potentially at risk of Pressure Ulcers (PUs), in particular the persons affected by Spinal Cord Injury (SCI), also due to their frequent alteration or loss of subcutaneous skin sensitivity. Pressure sores are one of the most common and fearful complications in SCI, with a severe impact on quality of life and on care health costs. They are often the cause of lengthening the time of hospitalization, slowing down clinical and rehabilitation programs and re-hospitalization. PUs, when arisen, heal slowly and, despite the protracted conservative medical therapies, sometimes they do not come to complete healing. Sometimes plastic surgery is needed, although even after it recurrence rates remain high. Further treatments have been proposed in addition to the usual medication, however they are characterized by a certain degree of invasiveness and are often conditioned by the availability of specific and sometimes expensive equipment, as well as by the presence of highly qualified personnel. In general, there is also a lack of good quality clinical trials for assessing their effectiveness and safety and they are often not decisive, especially for severe and recalcitrant ulcers. Among alternative techniques for the healing of skin ulcers in general, the adhesive elastic bandage, also known as "kinesio taping" and already recognized for the treatment of edema, hematoma and scarring, has been proposed. However, specific protocols and published studies are not available for PUs. The Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute, that hosts the largest Spinal Unit in Italy, pays great attention to the prevention and treatment of PUs in both acute and chronic patients. The rationale for the taping positioning around PUs investigated in this study is to improve lymphatic drainage and reactivation of the superficial bloodstream by increasing interstitial spaces and reducing skin and subcutaneous compression, notoriously compromised in the areas of onset of pressure sores. The total shortage in the literature and in user manuals of taping protocols for PUs supports this preliminary, exploratory, descriptive and uncontrolled pilot study with the primary aim of verifying the safety of a taping treatment for medium/severe grade PUs, "add-on" to the usual care. The choice of the ulcer sites selected (sacral and heel) has been affected by the feasibility of tape positioning.
All patients with a significant deficiency of skin sensitivity and reduced mobility are potentially at risk of Pressure Ulcers (PUs), in particular the persons affected by Spinal Cord Injury (SCI), also due to their frequent alteration or loss of subcutaneous skin sensitivity. More than one-third of individuals hospitalized in Spinal Units for rehabilitative treatments following a SCI develop PUs during acute hospitalization and it was also estimated that up to 85% of SCI persons develop at least one PU in the course of their lives. Pressure sores are therefore one of the most common and fearful complications in SCI, with a severe impact on quality of life and on care health costs. They are often the cause of lengthening the time of hospitalization, slowing down clinical and rehabilitation programs and re-hospitalization. PUs, when arisen, heal slowly and, despite the protracted conservative medical therapies, sometimes they do not come to complete healing. Sometimes plastic surgery is needed, although even after it recurrence rates remain high. Traditional treatment of PUs consists in the use of advanced dressings that may vary depending on the degree of staging of the lesion, its extent and the presence of clinical signs of necrosis and/or deep soft tissue infection. In addition to dressings, treatment cycles with intermittent negative pressure therapy can be indicated and the surgical approach (toilets + plastic reconstruction) could be reserved to chronic lesions with no response to traditional dressings or in the case of underlying osteomyelitis. Alternative treatments (e.g. electrotherapy, pulsed electromagnetic fields, ultraviolet light, infrared radiation, laser therapy, ultrasound, shock waves) have been proposed in addition to the usual medication, however they are characterized by a certain degree of invasiveness and are often conditioned by the availability of specific and sometimes expensive equipment, as well as by the presence of highly qualified personnel. In general, there is also a lack of good quality clinical trials for assessing the effectiveness and safety of such techniques that are often not decisive for healing, especially for severe and recalcitrant lesions. Among alternative techniques for the healing of skin ulcers in general, the adhesive elastic bandage, also known as "kinesio taping" or "neuro taping" and already recognized for the treatment of edema, hematoma and scarring, has been proposed. However, specific protocols and published studies are not available for PUs. The Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute hosts the largest Spinal Unit in Italy as for number of beds and patients admitted. In addition to the intensive rehabilitation of SCI patients, great attention is paid to the prevention and treatment of PUs in both acute and chronic patients, involving physicians, physiotherapists and nurses. Some Physical Therapists of the Hospital are trained and experienced in the use of adhesive elastic bandage for various neuromuscular applications and a physiotherapy/nursing team has conceived, under medical supervision, the taping protocol for the PUs therapy proposed in this study. The rationale for such a taping positioning around PUs is to improve lymphatic drainage and reactivation of the superficial bloodstream by increasing interstitial spaces and reducing skin and subcutaneous compression, notoriously compromised in the areas of onset of pressure sores. Therefore, it is considered that, thanks to the normalization of blood and lymphatic flow, the proposed protocol may have a facilitating action to heal such lesions, especially if they are severe and recalcitrant to normal therapies. The total shortage in the literature and in user manuals of taping protocols for PUs supports this preliminary, exploratory, descriptive and uncontrolled pilot study with the primary aim of verifying the safety of a taping treatment for medium/severe grade PUs, "add-on" to the usual care. The choice of the ulcer sites selected (sacral and heel) has been affected by the feasibility of tape positioning. ;
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