Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05367921

SWISS_EVIDENCE - Compartment Compressibility Monitoring Using CPM#1

Clinical Validation of CPM#1 Compression Ratio Measurement on Healthy Volunteers

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
21 (actual)
Sponsor
Compremium AG · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 84 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Compartment syndrome is a very serious musculoskeletal disorder, which can lead to potentially devastating consequences, such as limb amputation and life-threatening conditions. It is a well described medical condition considered to be an orthopaedic emergency affecting all ages. Even though compartment syndrome is a well described medical condition, the appropriate treatment (i.e., fasciotomy to release tissue pressure) is invasive and involves its own risks. Furthermore, and of most critical importance is the timing for the intervention of a fasciotomy. The concerned limb may already have had severe, sometimes even irreversible, tissue damage due to high intra-compartmental pressure within 6 to 10 hours. The standard diagnostic method for compartment syndrome is an invasive intra-compartmental pressure measurement via insertion of a pressure monitoring device into the muscle compartment. Commercially available intra compartmental pressure monitors have a highly variable intra-observer reproducibility and user errors are common. Compared to the invasive modalities, the Compremium Compartmental Compressibility Monitoring System (CPM#1) shows promising advantages for the clinical application. Not only is the technology used for the CPM#1 device safe and non-invasive for the patient with minimal training required for the healthcare professionals, but it has also demonstrated high intra- and inter-observer reproducibility (as per bench tests and clinical settings with prototypes, to be confirmed in clinical studies like this one). The use of the CPM#1 device therefore facilitates the measurements, as it is based on pre-existing ultrasound methods and avoids any further risks to the patients compared to invasive compartmental pressure diagnosis methods.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEMeasurement of compartment compressibilityApplication of the CPM#1 device for compartment compressibility ratio measurement - 4 measurements on both legs of each healthy volunteer will be performed

Timeline

Start date
2022-05-04
Primary completion
2022-05-17
Completion
2022-05-17
First posted
2022-05-10
Last updated
2022-05-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05367921. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.