Thermography-based blood flow imaging in human skin of the hands and feet: a spectral filtering approach.

Physiol Meas

Department of Nano and Biomedical Technology, Saratov State University, Astrakhanskaya st. 83, Saratov 410012, Russia.

Published: February 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on understanding how skin blood flow affects skin temperature through thermal waves from micro-vessels.
  • A new technique called spectral filtering approach (SFA) has been developed for thermography-based blood flow imaging, which processes data in the spectral domain instead of the time domain, avoiding complex calculations.
  • The SFA has been validated with a strong correlation to existing blood flow signals and has potential applications in monitoring blood supply in medical scenarios like skin grafts and healing burns.

Article Abstract

The determination of the relationship between skin blood flow and skin temperature dynamics is the main problem in thermography-based blood flow imaging. Oscillations in skin blood flow are the source of thermal waves propagating from micro-vessels toward the skin's surface, as assumed in this study. This hypothesis allows us to use equations for the attenuation and dispersion of thermal waves for converting the temperature signal into the blood flow signal, and vice versa. We developed a spectral filtering approach (SFA), which is a new technique for thermography-based blood flow imaging. In contrast to other processing techniques, the SFA implies calculations in the spectral domain rather than in the time domain. Therefore, it eliminates the need to solve differential equations. The developed technique was verified within 0.005-0.1 Hz, including the endothelial, neurogenic and myogenic frequency bands of blood flow oscillations. The algorithm for an inverse conversion of the blood flow signal into the skin temperature signal is addressed. The examples of blood flow imaging of hands during cuff occlusion and feet during heating of the back are illustrated. The processing of infrared (IR) thermograms using the SFA allowed us to restore the blood flow signals and achieve correlations of about 0.8 with a waveform of a photoplethysmographic signal. The prospective applications of the thermography-based blood flow imaging technique include non-contact monitoring of the blood supply during engraftment of skin flaps and burns healing, as well the use of contact temperature sensors to monitor low-frequency oscillations of peripheral blood flow.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aa4eafDOI Listing

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