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The effects of clinical support surfaces on pressure as a risk factor in the development of pressure ulcers, from a radiographical perspective: a narrative literature review.

Everton, C., Bird, S., Brito, W., Collé, P., Franco, A. P., Lutjeber, S., Nodeland, K., Rième, S., Siddika, M., Webb, J. and Angmorterh, S., 2015. The effects of clinical support surfaces on pressure as a risk factor in the development of pressure ulcers, from a radiographical perspective: a narrative literature review. In: Hogg, P. and Lança, L., eds. Radiation Dose and Image Quality Optimisation in Medical Imaging OPTIMAX 2014, Lisbon. Lifelong Learning Programme, 69-74.

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Abstract

Purpose: Pressure ulcers are a high cost, high volume issue for health and medical care providers, having a detrimental effect on patients and relatives. Pressure ulcer prevention is widely covered in the literature, but little has been published regarding the risk to patients in the radiographical setting. This review of the current literature is to identify findings relevant to radiographical context. Methods: Literature searching was performed using Science Direct and Medline databases. The search was limited to articles published in the last ten years to remain current and excluded studies containing participants less than 17 years of age. In total 14 studies were acquired; three were excluded as they were not relevant. The remaining 11 studies were compared and reviewed. Discussion: Eight of the studies used ‘healthy’ participants and three used symptomatic participants. Nine studies explored interface pressure with a range of pressure mat technologies, two studies measured shear (MRI finite element modelling, and a non-invasive instrument), and one looked at blood flow and haemoglobin oxygenation. A range of surfaces were considered from trauma, nursing and surgical backgrounds for their ability to reduce pressure including standard mattresses, high specification mattresses, rigid and soft layer spine boards, various overlays (gel, air filled, foam). Conclusion: The current literature is not appropriate for the radiographic patient and cannot be extrapolated to a radiologic context. Sufficient evidence is presented in this review to support the need for further work specific to radiography in order to minimise the development of PU in at risk patients.

Item Type:Book Section
ISBN:9781907842603, 1907842608
Number of Pages:92
Uncontrolled Keywords:radiography; radiology; pressure ulcer interface pressure; comfort; supine
Group:Faculty of Health & Social Sciences
ID Code:39657
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:02 Apr 2024 10:19
Last Modified:02 Apr 2024 10:30

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