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Trials / Suspended

SuspendedNCT05915234

Effect of Cryotherapy Modalities on Skin Temperature, Radial Artery Size and Flow Where Arterial Puncture Are Performed

Analysis of the Effect of Different Cryotherapy Procedures on the Radial Puncture Site for Blood Gas Analysis Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Suspended
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
48 (estimated)
Sponsor
Julio Alberto Mateos Arroyo · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Low-intervention clinical trial. The thermal and hemodynamic effects of different cryotherapy devices are evaluated. This study is included in the doctoral thesis of the principal investigator. Investigators: Principal Investigator: Julio Alberto Mateos Arroyo (RN, MSc, PhD student) Directors: Ignacio Zaragoza García (RN, PhD), Ismael Ortuño Soriano (RN, PhD), Paloma Posada Moreno (PhD). Setting: Faculty of Nursing, Physiotherapy and Podiatry of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. The three interventions to be evaluated are: * Applying crushed ice. * Apply frozen peas. * Apply comparator. Hypothesis: There are differences in the reduction of temperature, dimensions of the internal lumen of the radial artery and blood flow inside it depending on the different modalities of cryotherapy (crushed ice or bag of frozen peas) applied in the anatomical area of the wrist, point of arterial puncture for blood gas analysis. Main objective: To analyze the effect of 3 cryotherapy devices on the radial artery area. Secondary objectives * To analyze the thermal behavior of the superficial tissue under study according to the cryotherapy device used. * To analyze the differences in the radial artery caliber before and after the application of cold in the different experimental modalities under study. * To analyze the differences in radial artery blood flow before and after the application of cold in the different experimental modalities under study. * To identify the safety pattern of the use of the different cryotherapy devices (adverse events). Design: Randomized controlled clinical trial. This is a crossover clinical trial in which all participants will receive all interventions and will be randomized in the order in which they receive them. Population: Adults with a good general state of health, who specifically do not have factors that could affect their thermoregulation or vascular pathologies. Main variables: * Skin surface temperature. * Radial artery size. * Radial artery blood flow.

Detailed description

Pain caused by arterial puncture for blood gas analysis is one of the most common problems with this procedure. The low utilization rates of effective methods by healthcare providers for pain reduction, such as subcutaneous infiltration of anesthetics, make it necessary to search for effective and simple methods. The use of cryotherapy devices has proven effective for this purpose because the decrease in temperature increases pain threshold and tolerance due to a reduction in nerve conduction velocity and inhibition of nociceptors. In order to standardize these devices, it is necessary to understand the specific thermodynamic and hemodynamic effects of these devices. At the hemodynamic level, the reduction in temperature can produce arterial vasoconstriction. This effect may decrease the palpation of the radial artery, a necessary step for the identification of the optimal point of arterial puncture. Our hypothesis is that there are differences in temperature reduction, radial artery internal lumen dimensions and blood flow inside the radial artery depending on the different cryotherapy modalities applied in the anatomical area of the wrist, the point of arterial puncture for blood gas analysis. In order to obtain an answer to this hypothesis, we will propose a randomized controlled clinical trial with a sham comparator and two active interventions: crushed ice and frozen peas. In addition, this trial has a crossover design with the aim of minimizing the differences that may arise due to individual particularities (within-group variability), and thus increase the possible effect of the interventions (between-group variability). This choice has its justification in that the application of cryotherapy, according to some studies, has a thermal reducing effect with high individual variability. In this study, adults with a good general state of health, who specifically do not have factors that could affect their thermoregulation or vascular pathologies, will be recruited.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICECrushed iceEach participant will receive two active devices and one sham comparator in a crossover design.The cryotherapy device used consists of an opaque bag with a plastic outer cover and an aluminum interior filled with 80 grams of crushed ice. This device is applied on the skin where the optimal palpation point of the radial artery is located, where arterial puncture for blood gas analysis is usually performed to reduce skin temperature in ranges that decrease nerve conduction velocity and increase pain threshold.
DEVICEFrozen peasEach participant will receive two active devices and one sham comparator in a crossover design. The cryotherapy device used consists of an opaque bag with a plastic outer cover and an aluminum interior filled with 80 grams of frozen peas. This device is applied on the skin where the optimal palpation point of the radial artery is located, where arterial puncture for blood gas analysis is usually performed to reduce skin temperature in ranges that decrease nerve conduction velocity and increase pain threshold.
DEVICERoom temperature gelEach participant will receive two active devices and one sham comparator in a crossover design. The sham comparator device used consists of an opaque bag with an external plastic cover and an aluminum interior filled with 80 grams of ultrasound gel at room temperature. This device is applied on the skin where the optimal palpation point of the radial artery is located, where arterial puncture for blood gas analysis is usually performed.

Timeline

Start date
2026-12-01
Primary completion
2027-12-01
Completion
2028-06-01
First posted
2023-06-22
Last updated
2025-08-22

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05915234. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.