Near‐infrared spectroscopy data for foot skin oxygen saturation in healthy subjects

Author:

Suludere Mehmet A.1ORCID,Tarricone Arthur1,Najafi Bijan2,Rogers Lee3,Siah Michael C.4,Kang Gu Eon15,Lavery Lawrence A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic Surgery University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

2. Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas USA

3. Department of Orthopedic Surgery The University of Texas Health Science Center San Antionio Texas USA

4. Department of Surgery University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

5. Department of Bioengineering University of Texas at Dallas Richardson Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractOur objective was to evaluate normative data for near‐infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) in 110 healthy volunteers by Fitzpatrick skin type (FST) and region of the foot. We obtained measurements of the dorsum and plantar foot using a commercially available device (SnapshotNIR, Kent Imaging, Calgary Canada). On the dorsum of the foot, people with FST6 had significantly lower oxygen saturation compared to FST1‐5 (p < 0.001), lower oxyhaemoglobin compared to FST2‐5 (p = 0.001), but there was no difference in deoxyhaemoglobin. No differences were found on the plantar foot. When comparing dorsal and plantar foot, there was higher oxyhaemoglobin (0.40 ± 0.09 vs. 0.51 ± 0.12, p < 0.001) and deoxyhaemoglobin (0.16 ± 0.05 vs. 0.21 ± 0.05, p < 0.001) on the plantar foot, but no differences in oxygen saturation (dorsal 70.7 ± 10.8, plantar 70.0 ± 9.5, p = 0.414). In 6.4% of feet, there were black areas, for which no NIRS measurements could be generated. All areas with no data were on the dorsal foot and only found in FST 5–6. People with FST6 had significantly larger areas with no data compared to FST 5 (22.2 cm2 ± 20.4 vs. 1.9 cm2 ± 0.90, p = 0.007). These findings should be considered when using NIRS technology. Skin pigmentation should be evaluated in future NIRS studies.

Publisher

Wiley

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