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Standardizing Dimensionless Cutometer Parameters to Determine In Vivo Elasticity of Human Skin

  • Darren B. Abbas
  • , Christopher V. Lavin
  • , Evan J. Fahy
  • , Michelle Griffin
  • , Nicholas Guardino
  • , Megan King
  • , Kellen Chen
  • , P. Hermann Lorenz
  • , Geoffrey C. Gurtner
  • , Michael T. Longaker
  • , Arash Momeni
  • , Derrick C. Wan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: Skin fibrosis places an enormous burden on patients and society, but disagreement exists over methods to quantify severity of skin scarring. A suction cutometer measures skin elasticity in vivo, but it has not been widely adopted because of inconsistency in data produced. We investigated variability of several dimensionless parameters generated by the cutometer to improve their precision and accuracy. Approach: Twenty adult human subjects underwent suction cutometer measurement of normal skin (NS) and fibrotic scars (FS). Using Mode 1, each subject underwent five trials with each trial containing four curves. R0/2/5/6/7 and Q1/2/3 data were collected. Analyses were performed on these calculated parameters. Results: R0/2/5/6/7 and Q1/2 parameters from curves 1 to 4 demonstrated significant differences, whereas these same parameters were not significantly different when only using curves 2-4. Individual analysis of all parameters between curve 1 and every subsequent curve was statistically significant for R0, R2, R5, R6, R7, Q1, and Q2. No differences were appreciated for parameter Q3. Comparison between NS and FS were significantly different for parameters R5, Q1, and Q3. Innovation: Our study is the first demonstration of accurate comparison between NS and FS using the dimensionless parameters of a suction cutometer. Conclusions: Measured parameters from the first curve of each trial were significantly different from subsequent curves for both NS and FS. Precision and reproducibility of data from dimensionless parameters can therefore be improved by removing the first curve. R5, Q1, and Q3 parameters differentiated NS as more elastic than FS.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)297-310
Number of pages14
JournalAdvances in Wound Care
Volume11
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cutometer
  • In vivo skin elasticity
  • Skin elasticity
  • Skin elasticity measurement
  • Skin fibrosis
  • Viscoelasticity

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Emergency Medicine
  • Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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