1. Toward laboratory blood test-comparable photometric assessments for anemia in veterinary hematology.
- Author
-
Kim T, Choi SH, Lambert-Cheatham N, Xu Z, Kritchevsky JE, Bertin FR, and Kim YL
- Subjects
- Anemia blood, Animals, Cattle, Conjunctiva blood supply, Equipment Design, Hemoglobinometry instrumentation, Hemoglobinometry veterinary, Hemoglobins analysis, Hemoglobins chemistry, Least-Squares Analysis, Optical Imaging instrumentation, Optical Imaging veterinary, Phantoms, Imaging, Photometry, Reproducibility of Results, Spectrum Analysis, Veterinary Medicine, Anemia diagnosis, Anemia veterinary, Hemoglobinometry methods, Optical Imaging methods
- Abstract
Anemia associated with intestinal parasites and malnutrition is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in small ruminants worldwide. Qualitative scoring of conjunctival redness has been developed so that farmers can gauge anemia in sheep and goats to identify animals that require treatment. For clinically relevant anemia diagnosis, complete blood count-comparable quantitative methods often rely on complicated and expensive optical instruments, requiring detailed spectral information of hemoglobin. We report experimental and numerical results for simple, yet reliable, noninvasive hemoglobin detection that can be correlated with laboratory-based blood hemoglobin testing for anemia diagnosis. In our pilot animal study using calves, we exploit the third eyelid (i.e., palpebral conjunctiva) as an effective sensing site. To further test spectrometer-free (or spectrometerless) hemoglobin assessments, we implement full spectral reconstruction from RGB data and partial least square regression. The unique combination of RGB-based spectral reconstruction and partial least square regression could potentially offer uncomplicated instrumentation and avoid the use of a spectrometer, which is vital for realizing a compact and inexpensive hematology device for quantitative anemia detection in the farm field.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF