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Journal ArticleDOI

FPA-based infrared thermography as applied to the study of cutaneous perspiration and stimulated vascular response in humans.

TLDR
This review gives an overview of focal plane array (FPA)-based infrared (IR) thermography as a powerful research method in the field of physiology and medicine and a new phenomenon, stable punctate hidrosis, is discovered and described.
Abstract
This review gives an overview of focal plane array (FPA)-based infrared (IR) thermography as a powerful research method in the field of physiology and medicine. Comparison of the gained results with the data previously obtained by other authors with other research tools is given. Outer thermoregulatory manifestations displayed by the human organism subjected to whole-body heating (sauna bath) and physical loads (exercise bicycling) are quantitatively analysed. Some details of human body emotional sweating (psycho-physiological effect) are reported. Particular attention is paid to studying active sweat glands as individual objects. All experimental data were obtained with the help of a high-sensitivity (0.03 degrees C) fast 128 x 128 InAs IR detector-based thermal imaging system operating in the short-wave spectral region (2.5 to 3 microm) and perfectly suiting medical purposes. It is shown that IR thermography makes it possible to overcome limitations inherent to contact measuring means that were traditionally used before in thermal studies. It is also shown that heterogeneous thermograms displayed by organisms with disturbed inner equilibrium can be quantitatively analysed in terms of statistical parameters of related surface-temperature histograms, such as the mean temperature and the standard deviation of temperature (SDT). The increase and the decrease in SDT turned out to be typical of prolonged physical load and subsequent relaxation, and of external whole-body heating, respectively. Explanation of this result based on a hypothesis advanced within the context of the doctrine of human-organism evolution is given. Skin-temperature distribution function accompanying the relaxed organism in normality was found to closely resemble normal-distribution function. Symmetry break down and variation of the shape of this characteristic may serve as an indicator of homeostasis shift and can be used as a quantitative criterion for the latter. A new phenomenon, stable punctate hidrosis, is discovered and described. The term sweatology is introduced to refer to the discussed specific research area in biomedical science.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Medical applications of infrared thermography: A review.

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Classification of factors influencing the use of infrared thermography in humans: A review

TL;DR: This review focuses on the lack of comprehensive information about the factors influencing the use of IRT in humans, and proposes a comprehensive classification in three primary groups: environmental, individual and technical factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermographic imaging in sports and exercise medicine: A Delphi study and consensus statement on the measurement of human skin temperature

TL;DR: It is intended that the TISEM can also be applied to evaluate bias in thermographic studies and to guide practitioners in the use of this technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal imaging of cutaneous temperature modifications in runners during graded exercise.

TL;DR: High-resolution thermal imaging is used to visualize the human whole body anterior cutaneous temperature (Tc) variations in well-trained runners during graded exercise to indicate that thermal infrared imaging permits the quantitative evaluation of specific cutaneous whole body thermal adaptations which occur during and after graded physical activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infrared thermal imaging for detection of peripheral vascular disorders.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the thermal imaging technique is an effective technique for detecting small temperature changes in the human body due to vascular disorders.
References
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Book

The Physics of Medical Imaging

Steve Webb
TL;DR: The mathematics of image formation and image processing: The concept of object and image The relationship between object and images The general image processing problem Discrete Fourier representation and the models for imaging systems The general theory of image restoration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infrared optical properties of water and ice spheres

TL;DR: In this article, the IR absorption coefficient, reflectivity and complex index of refraction of ice and water spheres, calculating single scattering albedo, asymmetry factor and extinction cross section are calculated.
Book

Thermal Imaging Systems

J.M. Lloyd
TL;DR: A color image forming system in which thermal energy is applied to the time the image forming layer by controlling the temperature of the thermal printing head and, via one or more thermal print head at least partially independently from the same access thermographic imaging element surface at least two and preferably three different image-forming layers of the element.
Book

Raman/infrared atlas of organic compounds

TL;DR: In this article, the Spectra Recording Conditions of Raman Spectra Spectra Captions Indexes Classification System Spectra A1-01 bis O-06 For arrangement of spectra, see p. XII-XIV "Classification System" Indexes List of Spectra Formula Index Alphabetical Index Substituent Index
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