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. 1994 Mar;32(3):150-8.
doi: 10.1038/sc.1994.28.

Prospective study of pressure ulcer risk in spinal cord injury patients

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Prospective study of pressure ulcer risk in spinal cord injury patients

G P Rodriguez et al. Paraplegia. 1994 Mar.

Abstract

Sixty men with spinal cord injury who had developed pressure ulcers in the past but whose skin was intact when they joined the study were followed for 2 years, or until a pressure ulcer developed. Forty of the men were contacted every 4-6 weeks to answer questions about their skin care practices and to provide a 24 hour urine sample. The others were only contacted at the beginning and the end of the study to answer a questionnaire and to provide a urine sample. Changes in skin collagen metabolism were monitored by measuring urinary excretion of a metabolite, glucosyl-galactosyl hydroxylysine (glu-gal Hyl), corrected for creatinine excretion. Sustained increases in levels of glu-gal Hyl excretion were detected at least 2 months and as much as 5 months in advance of overt clinical signs of ulcer development. Increased excretion of glu-gal Hyl was significantly associated (p < 0.05) with the development of a pressure ulcer. An increase in the urinary excretion of glu-gal Hyl is an indication of increased degradation of skin collagen. Body mass index (weight/height2) of 33% of subjects with pressure ulcers, and 12% of those without, was at least one standard deviation below the mean of all subjects. Thirty-six percent of those who smoked developed ulcers, while only 26% of the nonsmokers did.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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