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The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework

Pressure ulcers are localized sites of tissue damage which form due to the continuous exposure of skin and underlying soft tissues to sustained mechanical loading, by bodyweight forces or because a body site is in prolonged contact with an interfacing object. The latter is the common cause for the s...

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Autores principales: Lustig, Adi, Margi, Raz, Orlov, Aleksei, Orlova, Daria, Azaria, Liran, Gefen, Amit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7893381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33606118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10237-021-01432-w
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author Lustig, Adi
Margi, Raz
Orlov, Aleksei
Orlova, Daria
Azaria, Liran
Gefen, Amit
author_facet Lustig, Adi
Margi, Raz
Orlov, Aleksei
Orlova, Daria
Azaria, Liran
Gefen, Amit
author_sort Lustig, Adi
collection PubMed
description Pressure ulcers are localized sites of tissue damage which form due to the continuous exposure of skin and underlying soft tissues to sustained mechanical loading, by bodyweight forces or because a body site is in prolonged contact with an interfacing object. The latter is the common cause for the specific sub-class of pressure ulcers termed ‘medical device-related pressure ulcers’, where the injury is known to have been caused by a medical device applied for a diagnostic or therapeutic purpose. Etiological research has established three key contributors to pressure ulcer formation, namely direct cell and tissue deformation, inflammatory edema and ischemic damage which are typically activated sequentially to fuel the injury spiral. Here, we visualize and analyze the above etiological mechanism using a new cell-scale modeling framework. Specifically, we consider here the deformation-inflicted and inflammatory contributors to the damage progression in a medical device-related pressure ulcer scenario, forming under a continuous positive airway pressure ventilation mask at the microarchitecture of the nasal bridge. We demonstrate the detrimental effects of exposure to high-level continuous external strains, which causes deformation-inflicted cell damage almost immediately. This in turn induces localized edema, which exacerbates the cell-scale mechanical loading state and thereby progresses cell damage further in a nonlinear, escalating pattern. The cell-scale quantitative description of the damage cascade provided here is important not only from a basic science perspective, but also for creating awareness among clinicians as well as industry and regulators with regards to the need for improving the design of skin-contacting medical devices.
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spelling pubmed-78933812021-02-19 The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework Lustig, Adi Margi, Raz Orlov, Aleksei Orlova, Daria Azaria, Liran Gefen, Amit Biomech Model Mechanobiol Review Paper Pressure ulcers are localized sites of tissue damage which form due to the continuous exposure of skin and underlying soft tissues to sustained mechanical loading, by bodyweight forces or because a body site is in prolonged contact with an interfacing object. The latter is the common cause for the specific sub-class of pressure ulcers termed ‘medical device-related pressure ulcers’, where the injury is known to have been caused by a medical device applied for a diagnostic or therapeutic purpose. Etiological research has established three key contributors to pressure ulcer formation, namely direct cell and tissue deformation, inflammatory edema and ischemic damage which are typically activated sequentially to fuel the injury spiral. Here, we visualize and analyze the above etiological mechanism using a new cell-scale modeling framework. Specifically, we consider here the deformation-inflicted and inflammatory contributors to the damage progression in a medical device-related pressure ulcer scenario, forming under a continuous positive airway pressure ventilation mask at the microarchitecture of the nasal bridge. We demonstrate the detrimental effects of exposure to high-level continuous external strains, which causes deformation-inflicted cell damage almost immediately. This in turn induces localized edema, which exacerbates the cell-scale mechanical loading state and thereby progresses cell damage further in a nonlinear, escalating pattern. The cell-scale quantitative description of the damage cascade provided here is important not only from a basic science perspective, but also for creating awareness among clinicians as well as industry and regulators with regards to the need for improving the design of skin-contacting medical devices. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2021-02-19 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC7893381/ /pubmed/33606118 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10237-021-01432-w Text en © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH, DE part of Springer Nature 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Review Paper
Lustig, Adi
Margi, Raz
Orlov, Aleksei
Orlova, Daria
Azaria, Liran
Gefen, Amit
The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
title The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
title_full The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
title_fullStr The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
title_full_unstemmed The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
title_short The mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
title_sort mechanobiology theory of the development of medical device-related pressure ulcers revealed through a cell-scale computational modeling framework
topic Review Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7893381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33606118
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10237-021-01432-w
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