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Intermittent Pneumatic
Compression
Intermittent Pneumatic Compression➔Used primarily for the management of chronic edema➔Application of external mechanical pressure to alleviate the effects of edema. ➔Edema is reduced by moving excess interstitial fluid to sites of normal lymphatic or venous drainage
Definition of Terms
➔ Edema ➔ a condition in which the amount of fluid within
interstitial spaces is greater than normal➔ Effusion
➔ specifically refers to an excess of fluid in a cavity
➔ Ascites ➔ accumulation of fluid in the abdominal cavity
➔ Anasarca ➔ generalized massive edema
Physiologic Factors
Total Body Fluid
Intracellular Fluid
Extracellular Fluid
Plasma Interstitial Fluid
Free form Gel form
Physiologic Factors
Tissue compartments The intravascular compartment
contains fluid (i.e., blood) within the cardiac chambers and vascular system of the body
The extravascular system is everything outside of the intravascular compartment
cellular, interstitial, and lymphatic subcompartments
Physiologic Factors
Filtration is the movement of fluid out of the capillary
Reabsorption is the movement of fluid back into the distal
end of the capillary & small venules
Lymphatic system
removes excess fluid from the interstitium and returns it back to the intravascular compartment
Edema is developed when net capillary filtration exceeds the capacity of the lymphatics to carry away the fluid (i.e., net filtration > lymph flow)
Factors Regulating Exchange of fluid
1. Hydrostatic Pressuren Causes fluids moving through a semipermeable
membrane to flow from higher pressure to the lower pressure
2. Interstitial Pressure
n Normally negative (-5.3 mmHg); acts as a suction
Factors Regulating Exchange of fluid
3. Osmotic Pressuren Causes fluids to pass from areas of lower
concentration to areas of higher concentration of an osmotic substances
n Protein and sodium ionsn Oncotic Pressure (OP) or Colloid Osmotic
Pressure (COP)n (PCOP) / IFCOP
Factors Regulating Exchange of fluid
4. Vascular permeability (leakiness)
Permeability of the capillary wall is controlled by endothelial cells lining the blood vessels
Vasoactive substances (histamine)cause gaps between endothelial cells to increase
Factors that disrupt normal fluid exchange
Changes in:• capillary permeability• release of vasoactive substances• increase of excessive decrease in tissue temperature• capillary hydrostatic pressure• increase arterial flow to capillaries• pooling of blood in veins: pressure on veins
Factors that disrupt normal fluid exchange
Injury to tissue more fluid flows to the interstitium e.g. burns
Obstruction in the lymphatic system removal of lymph nodes (eg. Radical
mastectomy) elephantiasis
Effects of Edema
may cause pain due to increased pressure on the sensory nerve
may cause tissue necrosis due to lack of blood flow to a part resulting from the compression
decrease the range of motion and function of joints
osteoporosis of bone due to the lack of use
thrombosis and pulmonary embolism
Factors to Consider in Edemaacute or chronic
acute: swelling that has occurred recently and rapidly usually after an injury
chronic: swelling that persists for some time; related to a trauma or injury that remains beyond the time expected for normal healing to occur
amount of swelling accumulation of fluid in the interstitium
may be noticeable if it increase to 30% above normal
Factors to Consider in Edemaconsistency of the fluid
transudate vs. exudates pitting or non-pitting
site and size of edematous area near a nerve plexus or a major blood
vessel; pressure can block nerve conduction or blood flow and lead to further compliance
Indications
✔Chronic edema✔Lymphedema✔Amputation✔Prevention of thrombophlebitis✔Wound healing✔Venous stasis ulcers
Contraindications
✗Acute pulmonary edema✗Congestive heart failure✗Recent or acute DVT✗Acute fracture✗Acute local dermatological infections✗Edema immediately after a traumatic injury✗Arterial insufficiency✗Infection (at the site of treatment)✗Kidney dysfunction✗Obstructed lymphatic channels
IPC Units
air pumps
applied pressure to the limbs increase the pressure of the fluids in the interstitial spaces to a level higher than that of the lymph and blood vessels
IPC Units
the resulting pressure gradient encourages the fluids in the interstitial spaces to return to the venous and lymphatic vessels
since applied intermittently; acts like a pump
Modified IPC Units
Wright Linear Pump Compression through
different “cell” in the garment that gives more pressure distally than proximally
Gradient pressure promotes the flow of fluid from the distal to the proximal part of the limb
Modified IPC Units
Huntleigh Sequential System
Has 3 chambers, filled sequentially
Modified IPC Units
Jobst Cryo/ Temp Combination of ice
and compression Cooling of a limb
with either intermittent or continuous controlled compression
General Treatment GuidelinesKnow the indications and precautions of using the IPC unit
Have the knowledge and the skill on how to operate the unit
General Treatment Guidelineshave prior knowledge on the disease entity causing the edema that could be managed by using the unit
know the patient’s diagnosis, history and systemic or CV conditions
General Treatment Guidelinesrule out the presence of DVT by performing test or by observing the limb
explain to the patient the purpose of the IPC, how the treatment goes and what the patient should expect while undergoing treatment
Parameters
Know the range of physiologic pressure that could be applied to the limb involved
UE: 40-60 mmHg LE: 60-80 mmHg Pressure applied should not exceed the diastolic
pressure
Parameters
Inflation and deflation (3:1) Edema reduction: 45-90 sec on / 15-30 sec off
Shape residual limb: 4:1 ratio
Parameters
Treatment Duration Most out-patient settings
20 minutes Min daily for lymphedema
2 hours to 2-three hour sessions Traumatic edema
2 hours Venous ulcers
2.5 hours/3x/week to two hour periods Residual limb reduction
1 hour to 3 hour sessions totaling 4 hours
Techniques of Application
Before treatment Assess the involved limb Redness, warmth and other skin conditions Measure limb girth (us bony prominences as
reference points and mark the skin every 2-3 inches and record girth at each marking)
check for contraindications
Techniques of Application
Observe proper draping and positioning of patient
patient should wear comfortable and non-restrictive clothing
remove jewelry patient should be lying in supine comfortably;
breathing not compromised part to be treated should be encased in either
stockinette/pillowcase for hygiene part should be elevated to above the heart level
Techniques of Application
always check the patient’s BP and pulse to determine the amount of pressure to be applied using the diastolic pressure as basis
determine the settings of the unit as to inflation-deflation pressure, on-off time (3:1 ratio; 90 sec on, 30 sec off) and treatment duration
Techniques of Application
explain to the patient that the initial cycles may be uncomfortable but will subside as the treatment progresses
Should feel NO PAIN, TINGLING OR NUMBNESS from the pressure of IPC
allow at least 3 inflation-deflation cycles to check for any adverse reactions from the patient and any malfunctioning from the machine before leaving
Techniques of Application
After Treatment Return the unit’s settings to zero and
deflate the sleeves Check the patient’s BP Reassess the limb (take girth
measurements again) and skin condition
Techniques of Application
After Treatment Instruct patient to: Note return of edema (time, location, amount) Elevate the extremity as much as possible Apply compressive wrap or garment Engage in active movement as much as
possible
Techniques of Application
Welts may appear; explain to the pt. that these would disappear after 20-30 min.
Apply a compression bandage
Do after-care to the unit & the treatment area
Possible complications of treatmentSwelling in other areas
Controlled with elevation & gentle active exercise
Stiffness of joints with in treatment areaShortness of breath may indicate fluid overload in the lungs or pulmonary embolismNumbness or tingling in distal extremity
May indicate DVT, nerve irritation or damage
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Intermittent Pneumatic
Compression