Pressure Ulcers Clinical Trial
Official title:
Supplement Fluid & Collagen Deposition
The purpose of this study is to determine whether providing extra fluid to nursing home residents will help prevent or heal pressure ulcers. We hypothesize that providing extra fluid to nursing home residents will increase their skin blood flow and oxygen to support healing and maintaining healthy skin. Participants are enrolled who have a pressure ulcer or who are at-risk for an ulcer (determined by looking at risk factors). The study is divided into two 10 day phases. In Phase 1, we examine participant's usual status, including fluid intake and baseline healing potential. In Phase 2, participants are randomly placed in groups to receive either their usually prescribed fluid intake or additional fluid. A study nurse provides the fluid to the residents. We measure their actual intake, their body water, how well their kidneys are working, their potential to heal, and also monitor them for the development of fluid overload. This study is important because it helps us understand the role of a basic nursing intervention in the prevention and treatment of pressure ulcers.
Pressure ulcers are prevalent in nursing homes. They heal slowly, cause pain, impair quality
of life, and are expensive to treat. Dehydration is a problem in some nursing home residents
and under-perfusion a problem in others. Theoretically, providing supplemental fluid to
under-hydrated residents should increase fluid in the various fluid compartments of the
body, increase subcutaneous oxygen, support skin integrity, enhance pressure ulcer blood
flow and pressure ulcer healing, including collagen production. This proposition has not
been examined in nursing home residents with pressure ulcers.
The purpose of this randomized clinical trial (RCT) in which subjects serve as their own
control is to determine whether administration of supplemental fluid to nursing home
residents with or at risk for pressure ulcers enhances collagen deposition. Specifically,
this study will determine whether oral administration of supplemental fluid given daily for
five days to persons with or at risk for pressure ulcers enhances collagen deposition,
increases total body water, augments subcutaneous tissue oxygen, increases pressure ulcer
oxygenation, and is safe.
The sample will be nursing home residents at risk for or with pressure ulcers. After
consent, baseline measures of collagen deposition, pressure ulcer oxygen, fluid intake, and
body water in the various fluid compartments are measured. Expanded polytetrafluoroethylene
(ePTFE) tubes are used to measure collagen deposition. Bioelectrical impedance is used to
measure body water. In the treatment phase, subjects are randomized to one of the two
supplemental fluid regimes. Supplemental fluid is administered for five days and collagen
deposition, subcutaneous tissue oxygen, pressure ulcer oxygen, and body water in the various
compartments again measured. Subjects are monitored for fluid overload. Data are analyzed
with RMANOVA and logistic regression techniques.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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