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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Analysis of Pre- and Post- Fatigue Thermal Profiles of the Dominant Hand Using Infrared Imaging

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TLDR
Infrared thermography appears to be a promising tool to measure the state of activation of muscle groups using thermal profiles pre- and post- fatigue using infrared thermography.
Abstract
Despite humans' extensive usage of the dominant hand, little has been done to monitor the hand's physical health in terms of development of Upper Extremity Musculoskeletal Disorders. Most of the muscles in the palmar region of the hand are intrinsic, and hence noninvasive EMG measurements give minimal information. In this study, an attempt is made to quantify the variations in thermal profile of the hand pre- and post- fatigue using infrared thermography. Subjects are tested using pinch grip based isometric contraction of the hand until fatigue. Baseline and post-fatigue thermal images are acquired using a Meditherm IRIS infrared camera. The process of image segmentation is carried out to delineate the dominant hand from the background. Features such as average temperature and kurtosis are extracted from the segmented images. Results show that there are wide variations in the intensities depicted by the thermal profile of each subject's hand. A decrease of 1.22% in median hand temperature of the palmar hand is observed. Similarly, a 1.17% reduction in temperature of the dorsal hand is detected post-fatigue. The kurtosis of the thermal profiles increases by 5.39% in the palmar hand and 6.63% in the dorsal hand post-fatigue. The statistical Student T-test performed on these features indicate that the decrease in average temperature is non-statistically significant (P>0.05); however, the increase in kurtosis is statistically significant (P

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Non-obstructive monitoring of muscle fatigue for low intensity dynamic exercise with infrared thermography technique

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the correlation between surface temperature and muscle activation parameters obtained using both IRT and sEMG methods simultaneously, and suggested that skin surface temperature can be utilized in monitoring and predicting muscle fatigue in low intensity dynamic exercise and can be extended to other dynamic exercises.
Journal ArticleDOI

Could Thermal Imaging Supplement Surface Electromyography Measurements for Skeletal Muscles

TL;DR: Estimated moderate linear and nonlinear correlations between thermal and electromyographic parameters are found for low level of muscle fatigue, which suggests that the presented method is useful in the analysis of muscle activation with the use of a thermal imaging as a complement to sEMG.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The physiological equivalent temperature (PET) is defined as the air temperature at which the heat budget of the human body is balanced with the same core and skin temperature under the complex outdoor conditions to be assessed, and enables a layperson to compare the integral effects of complex thermal conditions outside with his or her own experience indoors.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The present efforts are focused on automatic analysis of temperature distribution of regions of interest and their statistical analysis for detection of abnormalities in the area of medical IRT.
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Infrared thermal imaging in medicine

TL;DR: The features of modern infrared imaging technology and the standardization protocols for thermal imaging in medicine are described, and in certain applications thermal imaging is shown to provide objective measurement of temperature changes that are clinically significant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of human muscle fatigue

TL;DR: Indirect methods as endurance times and electromyography show variable responses during exercise and no close relationship to fatigue, so these methods are of limited value in measurement of human muscle fatigue.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Overview of Recent Application of Medical Infrared Thermography in Sports Medicine in Austria

TL;DR: It is concluded that MIT is a non-invasive, non-radiating, low cost detection tool which should be applied for pre-scanning athletes in sports medicine.
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