Resources

Resources

Browse our library of pressure mapping and force measurement resources, including eBooks, Case Studies, On Demand Webinars, Whitepapers, and much more.

Displaying 1 - 10 of 309
Articles & Research

New Study Finds Treatment for Common Jaw Disorder Reduces Stress Hormone by More Than 40%

Pressure offloading is essential in footwear, seating, and bedding to prevent pressure ulcers from forming. When skin or body tissue is subjected to sustained body pressure that is too high, it can cause localized ischemia—reduced blood flow to tissues. For people who sit or lie down for long...

Articles & Research

Quantitative evaluation of swallowing function in Parkinson’s disease using tongue pressure measurement

Thanks to Wasil Usmani for this writeup and his fascinating research! Contact him on LinkedIn for more details. Can your feet reveal the secret to safer, stronger fast bowling? As part of my biomechanics research into fast bowling, I used the Tekscan dynamic foot pressure system, i.e, Tekscan F-Scan...

Articles & Research

Two recent studies used K-Scan to gather data for their published research.

Pressure Mapping in Sports Footwear Reseach One research study in progress at a prominent university sports medicine lab is using the F-Scan GO in-shoe gait analysis system to measure gait pressure to study new high performance shoe designs. Specifically, the researchers are testing new cleat...

Video

A portion of a webinar by Dr. Robert Kerstein, DMD where he compares all digital occlusal technologies, and their use in treating patients.

Articles & Research

A 2015 study titled Consistency and sealing of advanced bipolar tissue sealers, published in Dovepress used Tekscan pressure mapping sensors and software as a benchmark to evaluate two commonly used advanced bipolar devices (ENSEAL(®) G2 Tissue Sealers and LigaSure™ Blunt Tip) for compression...

On Demand Webinar

Dr. Robert Kerstein on Improving Implant Complications with Digital Occlusion Technology

Articles & Research

T-Scan research study: Occlusogram Occlusal Force Estimates Compared to T-Scan 10 Relative Occlusal Force Measurements