Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT00385892

Safety Study of Textile Binder for Abdominal Compression

Feasibility Study DK150OS. Testing of Compression Textile. A Safety Study Among Healthy Volonteers

Status
Terminated
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
11 (planned)
Sponsor
Coloplast A/S · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This safety study was carried out to investigate to what extent the use of an abdominal binder influences IAP. The study was designed as a comparative cross-over study measuring bladder pressure.

Detailed description

Study Description: Transabdominal surgery might be associated with incisional pain, fear of rupture, inhibited mobilisation and risk of incisional herniation. An abdominal binder was developed for postoperative support of abdominal incisions. The abdominal binder provides a pressure of 10-15 mmHg. Worlds Society on Abdominal Compartment Syndrome (WSACS) defines that Normal Intra-Abdominal Pressure (IAP) is approximately 5-7 mmHg in critically ill adults, and that Intra-Abdominal Hypertension (IAH) is a sustained or repeated pathologic elevation of IAP \>12 mmHg. This safety study was carried out to investigate to what extent the use of the abdominal binder influences IAP. The study was designed as a comparative cross-over study measuring bladder pressure (Foley manometer, Holtec Medical, Copenhagen) in 11 healthy volunteers with and without wearing the abdominal binder. Results IAP measurements without wearing the abdominal binder were found to be surprisingly high with a range between 8,0 and 16,7 mmHg. (mean 10,5 mmHg.). This finding is explained by the fact that the subjects were not under relaxation and the fact that half of the subjects according to their BMI were categorised as being overweight or fat. Other investigations have demonstrated that relaxation decreases IAP and that BMI is positively related to IAP. We found that wearing the abdominal binder did increase IAP with a mean of 4,0 mmHg. (+/-1,4) or 39,3% (+/-14,61%). In conclusion Relating our results to the WSACS guidelines regarding IAP and IAH it is not likely that the use of the abdominal binder will increase IAP to a clinically critical extent in patients with normal IAP. It must though be assessed from case to case, whether the use of the abdominal binder is appropriate.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEAbdominal binder

Timeline

Start date
2005-08-01
Completion
2005-10-01
First posted
2006-10-11
Last updated
2006-10-11

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00385892. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.