4.4 Article

Pressure by design: How to improve the consistency of pressure garments in the clinical environment and implement a simple method for gathering evidence to establish efficacy

Journal

BURNS
Volume 48, Issue 5, Pages 1172-1182

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.burns.2021.07.019

Keywords

Pressure garment; Compression; Laplace Law; Reduction factor; Pressure garment design tool, garment dimension and pressure calculator

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Pressure garments are commonly used to treat scars after major trauma, but the optimal pressure for treatment is unknown. The introduction of Pressure Garment Design Tools has the potential to improve the consistency and effectiveness of treatment, as well as facilitate easier auditing of past treatments.
Pressure garments are used to treat scars after major trauma including burns. However, the ideal pressure for treatment is not known. Pressures exerted are not routinely measured and garments exert a wide range of pressures. Therefore, current treatment and its efficacy are variable. Pressure Garment Design Tools were introduced in 2012 but their application in hospitals has not been reported. A Garment Dimension and Pressure Calculator was used to audit pressures delivered by 8 pressure garments made for children using the hospital department's standard reduction factor. The tool was easy to use and showed that pressures exerted by standard garments ranged from 15 to 54 mmHg with highest pressures exerted on wrists. Results of our pilot study indicated that the Garment Dimension and Pressure Calculator was slightly quicker to use than our normal manual process for calculating garment dimensions and enabled easy auditing of past treatment. The Pressure Garment Design Tool was easy to use and calculated garments that exerted the mean target pressures of 15 mmHg and 25 mmHg, improving consistency. Pressures exerted by garments were difficult and time consuming to measure with the Picopress sensor. Pressure was not distributed evenly around the limbs and measurements were inaccurate on the smallest limbs. Crown Copyright (C) 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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