Skin temperature over an artificial heat source implanted in man (applied to IR thermography)
- 1 May 1975
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Physics in Medicine & Biology
- Vol. 20 (3) , 366-383
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/20/3/002
Abstract
The medical application of infrared thermography makes use of the skin temperature as an indication of an underlying pathological process. In order to study the relation between the heat production from a source in living tissue and the overlying skin temperature, artificial heat sources were implanted subcutaneously in human volunteers. The experimental results show that a detectable surface temperature increase over the heat sources presupposes high power output or superficial implantation. The effect of forced convective heat loss from the skin surface and lowered ambient temperature was studied. Forced convection markedly decreased the temperature contrast. An implicit conclusion from experimental and theoretical work is that a localized 'hot spot' can only exceptionally be attributed to metabolic heat production conducted to the skin surface from a buried pathological process. The thermal pattern over a breast tumour, a septic or aseptic inflammation or a tissue injury mainly reflects the vascular reaction.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analytical calculation of the skin temperature distribution due to subcutaneous heat production in a spherical heat source (relevant to thermography)Physics in Medicine & Biology, 1975
- Surface temperature over an implanted artificial heat sourcePhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1974
- Spectral emissivity of skin and pericardiumPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1973
- Image resolution in infrared thermographyPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1972
- Skin temperature distributions over veins and tumoursPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1972
- Skin temperature distributions over veins and tumoursPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1971
- Effects of natural and forced cooling on the thermographic patterns of tumoursPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1971
- The calculation of skin temperature distributions in thermographyPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1971
- Emissivity of Human Skin in vivo between 2.0µ and 5.4µ measured at Normal IncidenceNature, 1968
- Measurement of the Total Normal Emissivity of Skin Without The Need For Measuring Skin TemperaturePhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1967