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Clinical application of multiphoton tomography in combination with high-frequency ultrasound for evaluation of skin diseases

✍ Scribed by Karsten König; Marco Speicher; Martin J. Köhler; Rüdiger Scharenberg; Martin Kaatz


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
788 KB
Volume
3
Category
Article
ISSN
1864-063X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The first‐ever application of high‐frequency ultrasound combined with multiphoton tomography (MPT) and dermoscopy in a clinical trial is reported. 47 patients with different dermatoses such as benign and malign skin cancers, connective tissue diseases, inflammatory skin diseases, and autoimmune bullous skin diseases have been investigated with (i) state‐of‐the‐art and highly sophisticated ultrasound systems for dermatology, (ii) the femtosecond laser multiphoton tomograph and (iii) dermoscopes. Dermoscopy provides two‐dimensional color images of the skin surface with a magnification up to 70×. Depending on the ultrasonic frequencies from 7.5 MHz to 100 MHz, the signal depth varies from about 1 mm to 80 mm. Vertical ultrasound wide‐field images provide fast information on depth and volume of the lesion. The 100 MHz ultrasound allows imaging with resolutions down to 16 μm (axial) and 32 μm (lateral). Multiphoton tomography provides 0.36 × 0.36 × 0.001 mm^3^ horizontal optical sections of a particular region of interest with submicron resolution down to 200 μm tissue depth. The autofluorescence of mitochondrial coenzymes, keratin, melanin, and elastin as well as the network of collagen structures can be imaged. The combination of ultrasound and MPT opens novel synergistic possibilities in diagnostics of skin diseases with a special focus on the early detection of skin cancer as well as the evaluation of treatments. (© 2010 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)


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