TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermal transport characteristics of human skin measured in vivo using ultrathin conformal arrays of thermal sensors and actuators
AU - Webb, R. Chad
AU - Pielak, Rafal M.
AU - Bastien, Philippe
AU - Ayers, Joshua
AU - Niittynen, Juha
AU - Kurniawan, Jonas
AU - Manco, Megan
AU - Lin, Athena
AU - Cho, Nam Heon
AU - Malyrchuk, Viktor
AU - Balooch, Guive
AU - Rogers, John A.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Adam Meekings and Michelson Diagnostics for discussions related to OCT image analysis, Dr. Giles Spenlehauer for discussions related to skin temperature studies and Dr. Thomas Stephens, Dr. Lily Jiang and Trang Nguyen for subject recruitment and assistance with clinical study organization. Research was supported by L’Oréal Research & Innovation, the Materials Research Laboratory and Center for Microanalysis of Materials at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Webb et al.
PY - 2015/2/6
Y1 - 2015/2/6
N2 - Measurements of the thermal transport properties of the skin can reveal changes in physical and chemical states of relevance to dermatological health, skin structure and activity, thermoregulation and other aspects of human physiology. Existing methods for in vivo evaluations demand complex systems for laser heating and infrared thermography, or they require rigid, invasive probes; neither can apply to arbitrary regions of the body, offers modes for rapid spatial mapping, or enables continuous monitoring outside of laboratory settings. Here we describe human clinical studies using mechanically soft arrays of thermal actuators and sensors that laminate onto the skin to provide rapid, quantitative in vivo determination of both the thermal conductivity and thermal diffusivity, in a completely non-invasive manner. Comprehensive analysis of measurements on six different body locations of each of twenty-five human subjects reveal systematic variations and directional anisotropies in the characteristics, with correlations to the thicknesses of the epidermis (EP) and stratum corneum (SC) determined by optical coherence tomography, and to the water content assessed by electrical impedance based measurements. Multivariate statistical analysis establishes four distinct locations across the body that exhibit different physical properties: heel, cheek, palm, and wrist/volar forearm/dorsal forearm. The data also demonstrate that thermal transport correlates negatively with SC and EP thickness and positively with water content, with a strength of correlation that varies from region to region, e.g., stronger in the palmar than in the follicular regions.
AB - Measurements of the thermal transport properties of the skin can reveal changes in physical and chemical states of relevance to dermatological health, skin structure and activity, thermoregulation and other aspects of human physiology. Existing methods for in vivo evaluations demand complex systems for laser heating and infrared thermography, or they require rigid, invasive probes; neither can apply to arbitrary regions of the body, offers modes for rapid spatial mapping, or enables continuous monitoring outside of laboratory settings. Here we describe human clinical studies using mechanically soft arrays of thermal actuators and sensors that laminate onto the skin to provide rapid, quantitative in vivo determination of both the thermal conductivity and thermal diffusivity, in a completely non-invasive manner. Comprehensive analysis of measurements on six different body locations of each of twenty-five human subjects reveal systematic variations and directional anisotropies in the characteristics, with correlations to the thicknesses of the epidermis (EP) and stratum corneum (SC) determined by optical coherence tomography, and to the water content assessed by electrical impedance based measurements. Multivariate statistical analysis establishes four distinct locations across the body that exhibit different physical properties: heel, cheek, palm, and wrist/volar forearm/dorsal forearm. The data also demonstrate that thermal transport correlates negatively with SC and EP thickness and positively with water content, with a strength of correlation that varies from region to region, e.g., stronger in the palmar than in the follicular regions.
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U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0118131
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0118131
M3 - Article
C2 - 25658947
AN - SCOPUS:84922621748
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 10
JO - PloS one
JF - PloS one
IS - 2
M1 - e0118131
ER -