Back to Search Start Over

Brain thermal kinetics at brain-eyelid thermal tunnels overcoming COVID-19 thermometry limitations for automated asymptomatic infection detection in concert with physical and biological principles

Authors :
Adriano F Da Silva
David G. Silverman
Trevor Banack
Tyler J. Silverman
Feng Dai
Anna L Clebone
Ala S. Haddadin
Robert F Gochman
Alexander C Arroyo
M Marc Abreu
Michael F Bergeron
Ricardo L Smith
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Authorea, Inc., 2021.

Abstract

For centuries, temperature measurement deficiencies attributable to biological barriers and low thermo-conductivity (k) have precluded accurate surface-based fever assessment. At this stage of the pandemic, infection detection in children (who due to immature immune system may not effectively respond to vaccines) is critical because children can be readily infected and also become a large mutation reservoir. We reveal hitherto-unrecognized worldwide body temperature measurements (T°), in children and adults, over tissue typified by low-k similar to wood that may reach 6.8°C in thermal variability, hampering thereby COVID-19 control. Brain-eyelid thermal tunnels’ (BTT) integration of low-k and high-k regions creating a thermal pathway for undisturbed heat transmission from hypothalamus to high-k skin eliminates current shortcomings and makes the brain indispensable for defeating COVID-19 given that brain thermoregulatory signals are not limited by mutations. Anatomo-histologic, emissive, physiologic, and thermometric bench-to-bedside studies characterized and overcome biophysical limitations of thermometry through high-k eyelid-enabled brain temperature measurements in children and adults. BTT eyelid features fat-free skin (~900 µm) and unique light emission through a blood/fat configuration in the underlying tunnel. Contrarily, forehead features variable and thick dermis (2000–2500 µm) and variable fat layers (1100–2800 µm) resulting in variable low-k as well as temperatures 1.97 °C lower than BTT temperature (BTT°). Highest emission present in only ~3.1% of forehead averaged 1.08±0.49 °C (mean±SD) less than BTT° (p=0.008). Environmental and biological impacts during fanning revealed thermal imaging limitations for COVID-19 screening. Comparison of paired measurements for 100 pediatric patients showed that in the children subgroup above 37°C, BTT° exceeded body core temperature (Core°) in 60/72 patients; the average difference in the 72 patients was 0.62±0.7°C (p

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....30fb469340fd90890a4a5962ea24f25e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.22541/au.163432121.14501499/v2