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In the context of support surfaces, pressure is considered to be the force per unit area exerted on the body by a mattress, seat cushion, or other body support. In engineering terms, this quantity would be referred to as normal stress. The component of the force exerted on the skin acting along the skin surface can produce what is commonly referred to as shear and will be discussed subsequently. The distribution of pressure on a seat cushion or mattress depends on the relative fit between the body and the support surface, the mechanical characteristics of the body tissues and the cushion or mattress, and the distribution of weight in the body.

The ideal pressure distribution would be one where the soft tissue was not deformed relative to its unloaded condition (Chow, 1978; Levine, 1990; Brienza, 1993). Such a condition would minimize many of the effects believed to lead to the development of pressure ulcers. These effects are capillary blood flow occlusion (Kosiak, 1961; Reswick, 1976; Daniel, 1981), impairment of lymph flow, and excessive interstitial fluid flow (Reddy, 1981a; Mak, 1994). The precise underlying mechanism for cell damage has not been determined. However, since pressure distributions with low peak pressures and low pressure gradients likely minimize each of the presumptive harmful mechanisms leading to pressure ulcers, it is reasonable to strive for loading conditions with these characteristics.