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Testing the Reliability of Optical Coherence Tomography to Measure Epidermal Thickness and Distinguish Volar and Nonvolar Skin.

Authors :
Baumann ME
Haddad NR
Salazar A
Childers WL
Farrokhi S
Goldstein NB
Hendershot BD
Reider L
Thompson RE
Valerio MS
Dearth CL
Garza LA
Source :
JID innovations : skin science from molecules to population health [JID Innov] 2024 Mar 20; Vol. 4 (4), pp. 100276. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 20 (Print Publication: 2024).
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In persons with limb loss, prosthetic devices cause skin breakdown, largely because residual limb skin (nonvolar) is not intended to bear weight such as palmoplantar (volar) skin. Before evaluation of treatment efficacy to improve skin resiliency, efforts are needed to establish normative data and assess outcome metric reliability. The purpose of this study was to use optical coherence tomography to (i) characterize volar and nonvolar skin epidermal thickness and (ii) examine the reliability of optical coherence tomography. Four orientations of optical coherence tomography images were collected on 33 volunteers (6 with limb loss) at 2 time points, and the epidermis was traced to quantify thickness by 3 evaluators. Epidermal thickness was greater ( P < .01) for volar skin (palm) (265.1 ± 50.9 μm, n = 33) than for both nonvolar locations: posterior thigh (89.8 ± 18.1 μm, n = 27) or residual limb (93.4 ± 27.4 μm, n = 6). The inter-rater intraclass correlation coefficient was high for volar skin (0.887-0.956) but low for nonvolar skin (thigh: 0.292-0.391, residual limb: 0.211-0.580). Correlation improved when comparing only 2 evaluators who used the same display technique (palm: 0.827-0.940, thigh: 0.633-0.877, residual limb: 0.213-0.952). Despite poor inter-rater agreement for nonvolar skin, perhaps due to challenges in identifying the dermal-epidermal junction, this study helps to support the utility of optical coherence tomography to distinguish volar from nonvolar skin.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2667-0267
Volume :
4
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JID innovations : skin science from molecules to population health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38827331
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xjidi.2024.100276