Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This will be an explorative, proof-of-principle, open, multi-center investigation. The investigation aims to investigate the safety of the PERIsign system and the ability of physicians to differentiate between healthy individuals and subjects with involuntary muscle defense as a sign of peritonitis by utilizing PERIsign data. The investigation will include a total of 20 subjects admitted to hospital for suspected appendicitis and planned for emergency surgery and 20 healthy volunteers. Both male and female subjects aged 18-70 years will be enrolled. All subjects will undergo PERIsign examinations. Subjects with suspected appendicitis will undergo 1-2 PERIsign examinations before their planned appendectomy surgery. For the healthy volunteers, there is only 1 PERIsign examination. During each examination, 4 PERIsign curves will be obtained, one from each quadrant of the abdomen. The attending physician will interpret the appearance of the PERIsign curves of all subjects, including those from the healthy volunteers. The duration of the PERIsign examination will be documented, and usability data will be gathered, including the need for sensor adjustments, subject perception of the examination, and any discomfort experienced. In addition, blinded physicians will evaluate all subjects' PERIsign curves and determine whether each subject has involuntary muscle defense as a sign of peritonitis. These blinded physicians will have access to all 4 PERIsign curves obtained during each examination, while other data will not be disclosed to them. Safety will be evaluated through analysis of reported adverse events and device deficiencies


Clinical Trial Description

METHODOLOGY The PERIsign system is intended to aid physicians in demonstrating involuntary muscle defense as a sign of peritonitis by assessing involuntary activity in abdominal muscles by use of sEMG sensors and induced pressure. In this investigation, all subjects will undergo examinations with the PERIsign system. For subjects with suspected appendicitis, assessments will be performed at the clinic on up to 2 occasions. An initial examination will occur when the patient is scheduled for surgery and admitted to the hospital. The following examination is optional and will occur 4-6 hours after the initial examination but before their planned surgery. Post-operative clinical assessments, patho-anatomical diagnosis and clinical end diagnosis will be collected from medical journals, 30 ±5 days after the initial examination. For the healthy volunteers, there is only 1 examination. INVESTIGATIONAL MEDICAL DEVICE The PERIsign system is a medical device designed to measure the contractions of the internus and externus oblique muscles in the abdomen by use of surface electromyography (sEMG) sensors and induced pressure to facilitate the evaluation of a patient with acute abdominal pain. The PERIsign system aims to aid physicians in demonstrating involuntary muscle defense as a sign of peritonitis, an inflammation of the peritoneum, by measuring muscle activity both at rest and in response to pressure on the abdominal wall. The PERIsign Minimal Viable Product is the first iteration of the device and will be used for the present clinical investigation. It comprises four sensor heads with connections, used together with single use sensor electrodes, that are applied to four specific locations on the patient's abdomen, and one reference electrode attached to the hand. Each sensor head has a pressure sensor on top that measures the pressure applied to the sensor, mimicking the manual palpation performed by a physician. The PERIsign system will display and record the patient's muscle activity and the pressure being applied to their abdomen. PERIsign is connected to a laptop for data collection. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06296953
Study type Interventional
Source STB INN AB
Contact Andreas Jonsson, Phd
Phone +46735007471
Email andreas.jonsson@strandbackamedical.com
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 15, 2024
Completion date December 1, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04682860 - Management of Abdominal Pain in Acute Gastroenteritis Patients With Hyoscine Butylbromide Phase 4
Not yet recruiting NCT05649891 - Checklists Resuscitation Emergency Department N/A
Completed NCT02923245 - POCUS Assessment of Bladder Fullness for Girls Awaiting Radiology-Performed Transabdominal Pelvic Ultrasound N/A
Completed NCT02547857 - Transvaginal Pelvic Ultrasound in the ED N/A
Completed NCT03318614 - Bifidobacterium Infantis M-63 Improves Mental Health in Irritable Bowel Syndrome Developed After a Major Flood Disaster Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT02197780 - Head-to-head Comparison of Two Fecal Biomarkers to Screen Children for IBD N/A
Completed NCT02676232 - DARWeb: an Online Psychosocial Intervention for Children With Recurrent Abdominal Pain and Their Families. N/A
Recruiting NCT00209807 - Effect of Escitalopram vs. Reboxetine on Gastro-intestinal Sensitivity of Patients With Major Depressive Disorder Phase 4
Terminated NCT01410071 - Evaluation of Gastrointestinal Symptoms and Quality of Life in Patients With Sphincter of Oddi Dysfunction N/A
Terminated NCT01736280 - Evaluating and Treating Potential Research Participants With Digestive Disorders N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04104867 - Effectiveness of Prokinetic Agents in Improving Abdominal Discomfort at Colonoscopy N/A
Completed NCT03574727 - Abdominal Cutaneous Nerve Entrapment Syndrome
Completed NCT04614649 - Right Iliac Fossa Treatment-Turkey Audit
Completed NCT05438654 - Improvement of Diagnostic Approach Using PoCUS for Right Upper Quadrant Abdominal Pain N/A
Completed NCT06423586 - Effect of Lecithin-based Curcuma and Boswellia on Post-acute COVID-19 IBS N/A
Completed NCT03558009 - Epidemiological Analysis for Hereditary Angioedema Disease
Terminated NCT03148288 - Vitamin D Supplementation in IBS N/A
Completed NCT03708874 - Pain Management of Emergency Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy in Patients With Acute Cholecystitis
Withdrawn NCT04408872 - EUS vs EGD in Emergency Room Patients Referred for EGD N/A
Recruiting NCT02594774 - Efficacy of Osteopathic Treatment in Function Abdominal Pain in Children and Adolescents N/A