Differentiation of burn wounds in an in vivo porcine model using terahertz spectroscopy

  • Osman O
  • Jack Tan T
  • Henry S
  • et al.
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Abstract

The accuracy of current burn triage techniques has remained between 50-70%. Accordingly, there is a significant clinical need for the quantitative and accurate assessment of partial-thickness burn injuries. Porcine skin represents the closest animal model to human skin, and is often used in surgical skin grafting procedures. In this study, we used a standardized in vivo porcine burn model to obtain terahertz (THz) point-spectroscopy measurements from burns with various severities. We then extracted two reflection hyperspectral parameters, namely spectral area under the curve between approximately 0.1 and 0.9 THz (−10 dB bandwidth in each spectrum), and spectral slope, to characterize each burn. Using a linear combination of these two parameters, we accurately classified deep partial- and superficial partial-thickness burns ( p = 0.0159), compared to vimentin immunohistochemistry as the gold standard for burn depth determination.

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Osman, O. B., Jack Tan, T., Henry, S., Warsen, A., Farr, N., McClintic, A. M., … Arbab, M. H. (2020). Differentiation of burn wounds in an in vivo porcine model using terahertz spectroscopy. Biomedical Optics Express, 11(11), 6528. https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.397792

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