Hand Skin Temperature after Local Cold Test: Thermal Imaging Observation and Mathematical Computation

Author(s):  
Inna Stepanova ◽  
Larisa Zhorina ◽  
Grigoriy Zmievskoy
Author(s):  
Andra DEGAN ◽  
Ruxandra TUDOR ◽  
Ruxandra COSTEA ◽  
Dragoș BÎRȚOIU ◽  
Mihai SĂVESCU ◽  
...  

General anesthesia produces different degrees of central nervous depression and changes in the peripheral circulation, therefore affecting the patient’s thermoregulatory mechanism. Moreover, the lack of proper, specially designed equipment for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) environment monitoring can represent a challenge for the anesthetist. We examined the temperature variations correlated with different anesthetic protocols in dogs that underwent general anesthesia in order to evaluate changes in rectal and distal extremities temperature, before and after anesthesia. This study was conducted at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine in Bucharest, on 21 dogs that were divided in 3 groups depending on the anesthetic protocol used. First group (B) received butorphanol (0.2 mg/kg, intravenously IV), second group (BK) had butorphanol (0.2 mg/kg) and a low dose of ketamine (2 mg/kg) IV, and group 3 (BM) was premedicated with butorphanol (0.2 mg/kg) and midazolam (0.2 mg/kg) IV. All patients were induced with propofol i.v. (3.24±0.68), intubated and maintained with isoflurane and oxygen. We determined rectal temperature before and right after the end of anesthesia with a digital thermometer and distal extremities temperature with the use of a thermal imaging camera attached to a smartphone. There was no significant difference between the rectal temperature before and after anesthesia within the 3 groups. Patients in group BK had a significant change in skin temperature at the end of anesthesia in all limbs (from 310C to 29.8 0C, p=0.008 and from 31 0C to 29.70C, p=0.009), respectively). Temperature variations were presented before and at the end of anesthesia, for all the groups especially at skin level. This study revealed that mobile thermal imaging represents a non-invasive technique that is helpful in assessing real time temperature changes in patients undergoing general anesthesia.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harvey N. Mayrovitz ◽  
Paige E. Spagna ◽  
Martha C. Taylor

2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-55
Author(s):  
Stephen P. Fenemor ◽  
Nicholas D. Gill ◽  
Stacy T. Sims ◽  
C. Martyn Beaven ◽  
Matthew W. Driller

2012 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph T. Costello ◽  
Ciarán D. McInerney ◽  
Chris M. Bleakley ◽  
James Selfe ◽  
Alan E. Donnelly

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Balasankar Ganesan ◽  
Joanne Yip ◽  
Ameersing Luximon ◽  
Paul J. Gibbons ◽  
Alison Chivers ◽  
...  

Background: Conservative treatment, Ponseti method, has been considered as a standard method to correct the clubfoot deformity among Orthopedic society. Although the result of conservative methods have been reported with higher success rates than surgical methods, many more problems have been reported due to improper casting, casting pressure or bracing discomfort. Nowadays, infrared thermography (IRT) is widely used as a diagnostic tool to assess musculoskeletal disorders or injuries by detecting temperature abnormalities. Similarly, the foot skin temperature evaluation can be added along with the current subjective evaluation to predict if there is any casting pressure, excessive manipulation, or overcorrections of the foot, and other bracing pressure-related complications.Purpose: The main purpose of this study was to explore the foot skin temperature changes before and after using of manipulation and weekly castings.Methods: This is an explorative study design. Infrared Thermography (IRT), E33 FLIR thermal imaging camera model, was used to collect the thermal images of the clubfoot before and after casting intervention. A total of 120 thermal images (Medial region of the foot–24, Lateral side of the foot–24, Dorsal side of the foot−24, Plantar side of the foot−24, and Heel area of the foot–24) were collected from the selected regions of the clubfoot.Results: The results of univariate statistical analysis showed that significant temperature changes in some regions of the foot after casting, especially, at the 2nd (M = 32.05°C, SD = 0.77, p = 0.05), 3rd (M = 31.61, SD = 1.11; 95% CI: 31.27–31.96; p = 0.00), and 6th week of evaluation on the lateral side of the foot (M = 31.15°C, SD = 1.59; 95% CI: 30.75–31.54, p = 0.000). There was no significant temperature changes throughout the weekly casting in the medial side of the foot. In the heel side of the foot, significant temperature changes were noticed after the third and fourth weeks of casting.Conclusion: This study found that a decreased foot skin temperature on the dorsal and lateral side of the foot at the 6th week of thermography evaluation. The finding of this study suggest that the infrared thermography (IRT) might be useful as an adjunct assessment tool to evaluate the thermophysiological changes, which can be used to predict the complications caused by improper casting, over manipulative or stretching and casting-pressure related complications.


2019 ◽  
Vol 812 ◽  
pp. 127-133
Author(s):  
Catarina Pimenta ◽  
Carla Morais ◽  
Raul Fangueiro

This work compares thermal colour and emissivity of different pigments printed on to two types of jersey knitted fabrics (cotton and polyester). In order to analyze and differentiate the thermal colours of the knitted fabrics samples, diurnal and nocturnal thermal images of a female body were captured in an outdoor environment using a thermal imaging camera. Five pigments (white, black, yellow, magenta and cyan blue) were analyzed in a conditioned environment, simulating atmospheric (diurnal/nocturnal) and skin temperature, using a climatic chamber, a thermal manikin and a thermal imaging camera. The thermal tests allowed identifying the thermal colour of the printed pigments for application in the diurnal thermal camouflage garments.


1992 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Gerra ◽  
R Volpi ◽  
R Delsignore ◽  
L Maninetti ◽  
R Caccavari ◽  
...  

To establish a possible different reaction between the male and the female to short-term exposure to cold, thermal, cardiovascular and pituitary hormonal responses to cold stress were measured in eight normal men and eight women (ages 19–24). The women were eumenorrheic and were tested in the follicular phase. Each subject, lightly clad, was required to remain for 30 min in a room at an ambient temperature of 2 5°C followed by a 30 min period in a cold room at 4°C. A month later, control tests were carried out at a constant 25°C temperature for 1 h in the same subjects. Skin temperature, heart rate, blood pressure and plasma levels of beta-endorphin, ACTH, cortisol, GH and PRL were measured before and after cold exposure in the two groups. Before the test, all examined parameters were similar in the two groups. During cooling, blood pressure rose and pulse rate decreased significantly in the men, but not in the women, whereas skin temperature dropped in both groups. However, after cold exposure skin temperature was significantly lower in the women than in the men. A slight, but not significant increase in beta-endorphin, ACTH, cortisol and GH levels was observed after cooling in the men, whereas the women showed significant increments of these hormones, When values of skin temperature were combined with the differential (after minus before cold test) hormonal values, significant negative correlations were found for beta-endorphin, ACTH, cortisol and GH. As observed by other authors, a significant and peculiar cold-induced decline in plasma PRL levels was observed in the men; by contrast, a slight, but not significant decrement of PRL was found in the women. Control tests at a constant 25°C temperature did not show significant thermal, cardiovascular or hormonal changes in any subject. These data reflect stronger thermal, cardiovascular and PRL responses to cooling in men than in women. On the other hand, the women, but not the men, showed significant cold-stress-induced increments of beta-endorphin, ACTH and GH, suggesting that the more efficient adaptation to cold of the men might be what prevents the stress-induced hormonal changes observed in the women.


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