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The Use of Near Infrared Spectroscopy in the Diagnosis of Acute Compartment Syndrome

The Use of Near Infrared Spectroscopy in the Diagnosis of Acute Compartment Syndrome

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01171638
Enrollment
120
Registered
2010-07-28
Start date
2011-09-30
Completion date
2012-12-31
Last updated
2011-06-15

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Acute Compartment Syndrome

Keywords

near infrared spectroscopy, compartment syndrome, fasciotomy, INVOS

Brief summary

This is a prospective observational study to determine the reliability and accuracy of Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) to detect oxygen flow in the extremities of injured and non-injured soldiers over time. This technology may be useful in the detection of acute compartment syndrome. We hypothesize that: * NIRS values will be well-correlated with intracompartmental pressure measurements * NIRS values will be significantly different between non-injured and injured extremities, and injured extremities treated with fasciotomy for acute compartment syndrome. * NIRS values of the upper extremity and feet will correlate to values from normal legs in critical control patients and patients with unilateral sever lower extremity injuries.

Detailed description

The purpose of this prospective observational cohort study is to define the reliability and accuracy of Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) in the detection of intra-compartmental tissue perfusion in injured and noninjured extremities over time. Additionally, it will establish diagnostic perfusion value thresholds to be used in a subsequent interventional study confirming the efficacy of NIRS-based ACS monitoring. Through prospective measurements of NIRS values, vital signs, intracompartmental pressures and clinical examinations, guidelines and parameters will be established for the use of NIRS in diagnosing acute compartment syndrome (ACS), monitoring patients at risk for ACS and evaluating the adequacy of fasciotomy in patients treated for ACS. Null hypotheses: * NIRS values do not correlate with intracompartmental pressures, when they are obtained in the course of routine care of patients in the combat theater. * There is no difference in the NIRS values between non-injured, injured extremities and injured extremities treated with fasciotomy for ACS * NIRS values from the upper extremity and feet do not correlate to NIRS values from the normal legs in critical control patients and patients with unilateral severe lower extremity injury. Specific Aims: 1. Conduct observational, human-use, study to compile a normative reference database for NIRS-measured tissue perfusion in the uninjured upper extremity and the injured and non-injured legs of up to 120 injured subjects, from varying ethnicities (skin pigmentations) in varying degrees of hemodynamic status (stable, critically injured) to test the 3 hypotheses listed above. The study groups consist of one control group (critically ill without leg injuries) and one investigational group (critically injured with leg injuries): * COHORT 1: 25 critically injured patients with NO severe traumatic lower extremity traumatic injuries to provide normative data for the critically injured physiological status (Critical CONTROLS) * COHORT 2: 95 total (35 Cohort 2A; 35 Cohort 2B; 25 Cohort 2C) patients with severe traumatic lower extremity injuries presenting to a participating level 1 trauma center within 12 hours of their injury, to provide data on the acute post-injury phase. (INVESTIGATIONAL COHORT) * COHORT 2A: Patients meeting COHORT 2 inclusion criteria, who have UNILATERAL severe lower extremity injuries. * COHORT 2B: Patients meeting COHORT 2 inclusion criteria, who have BILATERAL severe lower extremity injuries. * COHORT 2C (ACS GROUP): Patients meeting COHORT 2 inclusion criteria, who have been clinically diagnosed by the treating provider using that treating provider's standards of diagnosing ACS and the patient, in addition to being diagnosed with ACS, undergoes four-compartment leg fasciotomy. Patients in this cohort need data collection to start BEFORE fasciotomy and continue AFTER fasciotomy. 2. Record provider comments regarding usability of the technology in its new embodiment and areas of needed design improvement. Apply this knowledge to perfect the industrial design and functionality of the final device. 3. Establish evidenced-based clinical guidelines for the diagnosis and management of ACS in traumatically injured soldiers to be tested in a subsequent interventional clinical (IDE) study.

Interventions

Non-invasive monitoring device applied on the surface of the skin that emits harmless red light to measure tissue perfusion.

Sponsors

United States Department of Defense
CollaboratorFED
Nonin Medical
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
J&M Shuler
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
15 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* male or female subjects * between the ages of 15 and 65 years old * (Cohort 1 only) Admitted directly to the ICU of a participating study site * (Cohort 2 only) Admitted to a participating study site with the following injury/mechanism combinations: Injuries: 1. Segemental tibia shaft fracture 2. Comminuted tibia shaft fracture 3. Schatzker Type III-VI tibial plateau fractures Mechanisms: 1. Fall from a height of \>= 8 feet 2. Motor vehicle or motorcycle crash 3. Pedestrian versus automobile

Exclusion criteria

* Patients, in whom application of NIRS monitoring is viewed as an impediment to care. * Patients with known prior leg fractures (not related to current injury) * History of peripheral vascular disease or lower extremity vascular surgery. * Amputation * Diagnoses with ACS prior to enrollment * Spinal injuries resulting in complete loss of function * Mangled lower extremity * Bilateral upper extremity injuries

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Incidence of acute compartment syndrome (ACS)24-48 hours at study siteThe gold standard criterion for ACS will be clinical diagnosis. That is, all subjects undergoing fasciotomy for clinically diagnosed ACS (NOT PROPHYLACTIC fasciotomies) will be considered to have ACS. NIRS values will be compared to clinical diagnosis to determine accuracy and threshold values.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Intracompartmental pressure (ICP)24-48 hours at study siteICP measurements will be taken at the doctor's discretion, as this is the only existing objective diagnostic tool for ACS. When available, ICP will be compared to NIRS values to assess the magnitude of agreement between the 2 tools.

Countries

United States

Contacts

Primary ContactAshley Cole
jandmshuler@gmail.com

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026