View clinical trials related to Skin Physiology.
Filter by:Pressure injuries are a major problem in patients with no or limited mobility and sensation such as paraplegics. Changes in skin physiology like changes in skin perfusion, oxygenation and humidity may explain and help to detect pressure injury development earlier. Thus, these parameters may be used for continuous monitoring of skin health. So far, there is no measuring technology available which would allow to measure continuously and quantitatively the physiological parameters, which are essential in the development of pressure injuries, over a long period of time in the clinical setting. The goal of this pilot study is to test whether this wearable technology can be used for measurements of skin parameter and whether temperature, pressure, humidity, perfusion, and oxygenation can be measured safely and accurately. 10 healthy individuals and 10 individuals with spinal cord will be enrolled for measurements with this newly developed device over the ischium for 30 minutes. The reproducibility of the measurements will be investigated.
The purpose of this study is to I. determine the effect of repetitive application of newly developed silicone based formulations (placebo water-in-oil emulsions) on transepidermal water loss and other physiological skin parameters and II. investigate the skin penetration of the model drug fluorescein sodium in tape stripping studies to determine the in vivo penetration profile from the water-in-oil emulsions.