scholarly journals Design and analysis of a continuous and non-invasive multi-wavelength optical sensor for measurement of dermal water content

Author(s):  
Mohammd Mamouei ◽  
Subhasri Chatterjee ◽  
Meysam Razban ◽  
Meha Qassem ◽  
Panayiotis A. Kyriacou

Dermal water content is an important biophysical parameter in preserving skin integrity and preventing skin damage. Traditional electrical-based and open-chamber evaporimeters have several well-known limitations. In particular, such devices are costly, sizeable, and only provide arbitrary outputs. They also do not permit continuous and non-invasive monitoring of dermal water content, which can be beneficial for various consumer, clinical and cosmetic purposes. We report here on the design and development of a digital multi-wavelength optical sensor that performs continuous and non-invasive measurement of dermal water content. In-silico investigation on porcine skin was carried out using the Monte Carlo modelling strategy to evaluate the feasibility and characterise the sensor. Subsequently, an in-vitro experiment was carried out to evaluate the performance of the sensor and benchmark its accuracy against a high-end, broad band spectrophotometer. Reference measurements were made against gravimetric analysis. The results demonstrate that the developed sensor can deliver accurate, continuous, and non-invasive measurement of skin hydration through measurement of dermal water content. Remarkably, the novel design of the sensor exceeded the performance of the high-end spectrophotometer due to the important denoising effects of temporal averaging. The authors believe, in addition to wellbeing and skin health monitoring, the designed sensor can particularly facilitate disease management in patients presenting diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, malnutrition, and atopic dermatitis.

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 2162
Author(s):  
Mohammad Mamouei ◽  
Subhasri Chatterjee ◽  
Meysam Razban ◽  
Meha Qassem ◽  
Panayiotis A. Kyriacou

Dermal water content is an important biophysical parameter in preserving skin integrity and preventing skin damage. Traditional electrical-based and open-chamber evaporimeters have several well-known limitations. In particular, such devices are costly, sizeable, and only provide arbitrary outputs. They also do not permit continuous and non-invasive monitoring of dermal water content, which can be beneficial for various consumer, clinical, and cosmetic purposes. We report here on the design and development of a digital multi-wavelength optical sensor that performs continuous and non-invasive measurement of dermal water content. In silico investigation on porcine skin was carried out using the Monte Carlo modeling strategy to evaluate the feasibility and characterize the sensor. Subsequently, an in vitro experiment was carried out to evaluate the performance of the sensor and benchmark its accuracy against a high-end, broad band spectrophotometer. Reference measurements were made against gravimetric analysis. The results demonstrate that the developed sensor can deliver accurate, continuous, and non-invasive measurement of skin hydration through measurement of dermal water content. Remarkably, the novel design of the sensor exceeded the performance of the high-end spectrophotometer due to the important denoising effects of temporal averaging. The authors believe, in addition to wellbeing and skin health monitoring, the designed sensor can particularly facilitate disease management in patients presenting diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, malnutrition, and atopic dermatitis.


2010 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brent Siesky ◽  
Alon Harris ◽  
Larry Kagemann ◽  
Danny Moore ◽  
Adam Werne ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 329-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Terrani ◽  
F. Campi ◽  
G. Baccelli

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2S11) ◽  
pp. 4068-4070 ◽  

Hemoglobin (hb) concentration is a basic parameter in the human blood, the absense of which causes anemia. The proposed work stays away from the superfluous wastage of blood while estimating hb concentration which could have serious impact on a anemic patient. There are fundamentally two classifications to be specific, invasive and non-invasive methods.In the invasive method blood sample is collected by hurtful needle stick. After that the collected blood sample is sent to a laboratory for examination. Then the results are announced back to the docter later which possibly leads to analysis and treatement delay. A non-invasive technique permits torment free online patient checking framework with least danger of infection. An optical non-invasive system is introduced for Hb focus. In this anew advanced system, retention of light by oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin is estimated at two wavelengths 660nm and 940nm. The specific wavelength of light is acquired from red and IR LED. The absorption coefficient of blood differs at various wavelength this reality is utilized to compute concentration of the hemoglobin.


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