At a glance
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Pilot Clinical Assessment of the Diagnostic Capability, Usability, and Function of an Automatic Blood Pressure Monitor for Use in the Diagnosis and Management of Pre-eclampsia in a Low-resource Hospital
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Sphygmo for Pre Eclampsia. Completed, enrolled 11 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The purpose of the study is to help make a lower cost automatic blood pressure monitor device for diagnosis and monitoring of pre-eclampsia in pregnant women, where automatic blood pressure monitoring is limited or not available. The study will compare this low cost device to a commercially available system used for pre-eclamptic women in many United States hospitals that the investigators will be bringing to Malawi as a part of this study. The team hopes to show that this lower cost blood pressure machine works well and can help women with pre-eclampsia. The study also aims to see if this machine is easy for the nurse to use. 20 women who are either at-risk or diagnosed with pre-eclampsia will be enrolled at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital. First, a nurse will fit the test device cuff on one arm of the subject and the commercially available cuff on the opposite arm. A trained research assistant and the nurse will record the blood pressure measurements and document any alarm indications made by each device. Blood pressure measurements will continue until monitoring is no longer clinically prescribed. The results of this study will help researchers understand the performance and usability of this device in Malawi and help decide if any design changes are needed.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
A team of engineers from Rice University has recently developed Sphygmo, an ambulatory, low-cost blood pressure monitor for use in the diagnosis and management of pre-eclampsia in low-resource hospitals