Development and experimental study of phantoms for mapping skin chromophores

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Abstract

Skin chromophore phantoms are widely used for better understanding of the light interaction with tissue and for calibration of skin diagnostic imaging techniques. In this work, different phantoms were examined and compared in order to find biologically equivalent substances that are the most promising for this purpose. For mimicking the skin medium and layered structure, a fibrin matrix with epidermal and dermal cell inclusion was used. Synthesized bilirubin, red blood cells and nigrosin were taken as absorbers. For spectral analysis of the developed phantoms a computer-aided multispectral imaging system Nuance 2.4 (Cambridge Research & Instrumentation, Inc., USA) was used. In this study, skin phantoms were created using such substances as bilirubin, melanin, haemoglobin and nigrosin.

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Silapetere, A., Saknite, I., & Spigulis, J. (2014). Development and experimental study of phantoms for mapping skin chromophores. Latvian Journal of Physics and Technical Sciences, 51(3), 58–66. https://doi.org/10.2478/lpts-2014-0020

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