Title of article :
Neonatal infrared thermography imaging: Analysis of heat flux during different clinical scenarios
Author/Authors :
Abbas، نويسنده , , Abbas K. and Heimann، نويسنده , , Konrad and Blazek، نويسنده , , Vladimir and Orlikowsky، نويسنده , , Thorsten and Leonhardt، نويسنده , , Steffen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
11
From page :
538
To page :
548
Abstract :
Introduction urate skin temperature measurement of Neonatal Infrared Thermography (NIRT) imaging requires an appropriate calibration process for compensation of external effects (e.g. variation of environmental temperature, variable air velocity or humidity). Although modern infrared cameras can perform such calibration, an additional compensation is required for highly accurate thermography. This compensation which corrects any temperature drift should occur during the NIRT imaging process. We introduce a compensation technique which is based on modeling the physical interactions within the measurement scene and derived the detected temperature signal of the object. als and methods s work such compensation was performed for different NIRT imaging application in neonatology (e.g. convective incubators, kangaroo mother care (KMC), and an open radiant warmer). The spatially distributed temperatures of 12 preterm infants (average gestation age 31 weeks) were measured under these different infant care arrangements (i.e. closed care system like a convective incubator, and open care system like kangaroo mother care, and open radiant warmer). s ors in measurement of temperature were anticipated, a novel compensation method derived from infrared thermography of the neonate’s skin was developed. Moreover, the differences in temperature recording for the 12 preterm infants varied from subject to subject. This variation could be arising from individual experimental setting applied to the same region of interest over the neonate’s body. The experimental results for the model-based corrections is verified over the selected patient group. sion oposed technique relies on applying model-based correction to the measured temperature and reducing extraneous errors during NIRT. This application specific method is based on different heat flux compartments present in neonatal thermography scene. Furthermore, these results are considered to be groundwork for further investigation, especially when using NIRT imaging arrangement with additional compensation settings together with reference temperature measurements.
Keywords :
Model-based correction , Temperature drift , Neonatal thermography , Compartmental heat flux , Clinical care
Journal title :
Infrared Physics & Technology
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Infrared Physics & Technology
Record number :
2376135
Link To Document :
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