DocumentCode
1508979
Title
In vivo high-frequency ultrasonic characterization of human dermis
Author
Guittet, Christelle ; Ossant, Frédéric ; Vaillant, Loïc ; Berson, Marceau
Author_Institution
Fac. de Med., INSERM, Tours, France
Volume
46
Issue
6
fYear
1999
fDate
6/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
740
Lastpage
746
Abstract
The aim of this study is in vivo skin tissue characterization of young and old human cutaneous tissues by estimating the slope of the attenuation coefficient. The method used is the centroid algorithm with a second-order autoregressive model to perform the spectral analysis. Backscattered signals are acquired with a 40-MHz transducer fixed on a three-dimensional robot. Diffraction phenomena are eliminated via an axial translation of the transducer that allows the acquisition of the signal in the focal zone. The slope of the attenuation coefficient is estimated on phantoms of known attenuation, in order to validate the method. Preliminary measurements of the slope of the attenuation coefficient are subsequently performed in the echographic mode on abdominal human skin samples in vitro at 40 MHz. After assessing the reproducibility of the measurement of the attenuation coefficient slope in human dermis at 40-MHz in vivo, this is carried out on the volar face of the forearm of 150 healthy subjects aged 14-85 yr. The values measured range from 0.7 to 3.6 dB/cm MHz. The main result of this study is the decrease with advancing age of the attenuation coefficient slope, which may reflect structural modifications of human dermis with age.
Keywords
biomedical ultrasonics; physiological models; skin; ultrasonic absorption; 14 to 85 y; 40 MHz; abdominal human skin samples; attenuation coefficient slope estimation; axial translation; diffraction phenomena; focal zone; forearm; healthy subjects; human dermis; in vivo high-frequency ultrasonic characterization; measurement reproducibility; old human cutaneous tissues; phantoms; structural modifications; young human cutaneous tissues; Attenuation measurement; Dermis; Diffraction; Humans; Imaging phantoms; In vivo; Robots; Skin; Spectral analysis; Transducers; Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Algorithms; Artifacts; Female; Forearm; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Regression Analysis; Reproducibility of Results; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Skin; Skin Aging; Transducers;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/10.764950
Filename
764950
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