Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Quantitative Assessment of Ischemia and Reactive Hyperemia of the Dermal Layers using Multi – Spectral Imaging on the Human Arm

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

Quantitative assessment of skin chromophores in a non-invasive fashion is often desirable. Especially pixel wise assessment of blood volume and blood oxygenation is beneficial for improved diagnostics. We utilized a multi-spectral imaging system for acquiring diffuse reflectance images of healthy volunteers’ lower forearm. Ischemia and reactive hyperemia was introduced by occluding the upper arm with a pressure cuff for 5min with 180mmHg. Multi-spectral images were taken every 30s, before, during and after occlusion. Image reconstruction for blood volume and blood oxygenation was performed, using a two layered skin model. As the images were taken in a non-contact way, strong artifacts related to the shape (curvature) of the arms were observed, making reconstruction of optical / physiological parameters highly inaccurate. We developed a curvature correction method, which is based on extracting the curvature directly from the intensity images acquired and does not require any additional measures on the object imaged. The effectiveness of the algorithm was demonstrated, on reconstruction results of blood volume and blood oxygenation for in vivo data during occlusion of the arm. Pixel wise assessment of blood volume and blood oxygenation was made possible over the entire image area and comparison of occlusion effects between veins and surrounding skin was performed. Induced ischemia during occlusion and reactive hyperemia afterwards was observed and quantitatively assessed. Furthermore, the influence of epidermal thickness on reconstruction results was evaluated and the exact knowledge of this parameter for fully quantitative assessment was pointed out.

© 2009 OSA/SPIE

PDF Article
More Like This
Investigation of arterial inflow and venous capacitance in human skin by use of RGB images

Izumi Nishidate, Hayato Kaneko, Takaaki Maeda, Yoshihisa Aizu, Tetsuya Yuasa, and Kyuichi Niizeki
7368_2F European Conference on Biomedical Optics (ECBO) 2009

Using quantitative diffuse multi spectral imaging method to assess Cushing disease treatment outcome

A. Afshari, MB Lodish, Y. Ardeshirpour, E. Gourgari, M. Keil, F. Chowdhry, E. Belyavskaya, C. Lyssikatos, V. Chemomordik, CA. Stratakis, and AH Gandjbakhche
BM3A.43 Biomedical Optics (BIOMED) 2014

Reconstruction-Free Imaging of Kaposi’s Sarcoma Using Multi-Spectral Data

Jana M. Kainerstorfer, Franck Amyot, Moinuddin Hassan, Martin Ehler, Robert Yarchoan, Kathleen M. Wyvill, Thomas Uldrick, Victor Chernomordik, Christoph K. Hitzenberger, Amir H. Gandjbakhche, and Jason D. Riley
BME6 Biomedical Optics (BIOMED) 2010

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.