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Elevated vacuum suspension preserves residual-limb skin health in people with lower-limb amputation: Randomized clinical trial
Author(s) -
Cameron Rink,
Matthew M. Wernke,
Heather M. Powell,
Surya Gynawali,
Ryan M. Schroeder,
Jayne Y. Kim,
Jeffrey A. Denune,
Gayle M. Gordillo,
James M. Colvin,
Chandan K. Sen
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the journal of rehabilitation research and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1938-1352
pISSN - 0748-7711
DOI - 10.1682/jrrd.2015.07.0145
Subject(s) - medicine , amputation , crossover study , perfusion , prosthesis , physical medicine and rehabilitation , surgery , randomized controlled trial , pathology , alternative medicine , placebo
A growing number of clinical trials and case reports support qualitative claims that use of an elevated vacuum suspension (EVS) prosthesis improves residual-limb health on the basis of self-reported questionnaires, clinical outcomes scales, and wound closure studies. Here, we report first efforts to quantitatively assess residual-limb circulation in response to EVS. Residual-limb skin health and perfusion of people with lower-limb amputation (N = 10) were assessed during a randomized crossover study comparing EVS with nonelevated vacuum suspension (control) over a 32 wk period using noninvasive probes (transepidermal water loss, laser speckle imaging, transcutaneous oxygen measurement) and functional hyperspectral imaging approaches. Regardless of the suspension system, prosthesis donning decreased perfusion in the residual limb under resting conditions. After 16 wk of use, EVS improved residual-limb oxygenation during treadmill walking. Likewise, prosthesis-induced reactive hyperemia was attenuated with EVS following 16 wk of use. Skin barrier function was preserved with EVS but disrupted after control socket use. Taken together, outcomes suggest chronic EVS use improves perfusion and preserves skin barrier function in people with lower-limb amputation.

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