Title :
Modalities and clinical applications of dynamic infrared imaging
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Medicine & Biomed. Sci., State Univ. of New York, Buffalo, NY, USA
Abstract :
Dynamic infrared imaging (DIRI), the most effective modality of dynamic area telethermometry (DAT), involves the acquisition of hundreds to thousands of consecutive thermal images, deriving information from the modulation of temperature and of thermal spatial distribution of small subareas. Four groups of clinical applications of dynamic infrared imaging are reviewed from the standpoint of their data processing following FFT analysis of temperature modulation and modulation of perfusion of the cutaneous capillary bed. These include: 1. Visual assessment of spatial abnormalities in perfusion kinetics that can be used in diagnosis of joint disease and of advanced cancer, as well as visual identification of abnormalities in subcutaneous circulation. 2. Objective computerized diagnosis of systemic chronic neuronal disorders that may affect modulation amplitudes and their spatial distribution. 3. Objective computerized detection of cancer, breast and skin cancer in particular, by their effect on the spatial distribution of attenuated subareas at specific frequencies of modulation. 4. Objective assessment of transient mental stress (psychological testing) and of exposure to neurotoxic agents that may affect modulation amplitudes and their distribution over limited periods of time. Following time-dependent changes in temperature modulation at specific frequencies one can assess the severity of functional perturbation of the autonomic nervous system.
Keywords :
biomedical optical imaging; biothermics; cancer; fast Fourier transforms; infrared imaging; medical image processing; neurophysiology; psychology; reviews; skin; autonomic nervous disorders; breast cancer; computerized diagnosis; functional perturbation severity; joint inflammation; lie detection; medical diagnostic imaging; mental stress; neurotoxic agents; objective diagnosis; skin cancer; temperature modulation; time-dependent changes; transient mental stress; visual diagnosis; Amplitude modulation; Cancer; Data processing; Diseases; Distributed computing; Frequency modulation; Image analysis; Infrared imaging; Kinetic theory; Temperature distribution;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2001. Proceedings of the 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7211-5
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2001.1017372