The use of thermal imaging in the evaluation of temperature effects of radiotherapy in patients after mastectomy—first study

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Abstract

The aim of the study was to evaluate the temperature parameter of the breast area in patients undergoing radiotherapy at various intervals. The relationship between temperature changes on the patient’s skin and the time after the end of radiotherapy was studied. Measurements with a thermal imaging camera were performed in a group of twelve volunteers. Six of them were healthy women who did not have thermal asymmetry between the breasts, whereas six were diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent mastectomy due to the advanced stage of the disease. The patients were qualified for radiation therapy. Thermographic examinations were performed before treatment, two months later and then six months after the end of the treatment. Temperature dif-ferences between the healthy breasts and the treated areas were assessed. Additionally, the correlation between a patient’s skin temperature changes and the time after the end of radiotherapy was analyzed. The highest skin temperature increase (1.47 °C) was observed 6 months after the end of RT compared to the measurement before treatment. It seems that thermovision may bring a new tool for quantitative analyses of the temperature effects of radiotherapy.

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Baic, A., Plaza, D., Lange, B., Reudelsdorf-Ullmann, M., Michalecki, Ł., Stanek, A., … Cholewka, A. (2021). The use of thermal imaging in the evaluation of temperature effects of radiotherapy in patients after mastectomy—first study. Sensors, 21(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/s21217068

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