Viscoelastic Properties of Human Facial Skin and Comparisons with Facial Prosthetic Elastomers

Author:

Beatty Mark W.12ORCID,Wee Alvin G.13ORCID,Marx David B.4,Ridgway Lauren5,Simetich Bobby2,De Sousa Thiago Carvalho6,Vakilzadian Kevin7,Schulte Joel8

Affiliation:

1. Research Service, VA Nebraska-Western Iowa Healthcare System, 4101 Woolworth Avenue, Omaha, NE 68105, USA

2. Department of Adult Restorative Dentistry, University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Dentistry, 4000 East Campus Loop South, Lincoln, NE 68583, USA

3. Department of Restorative Sciences, University of Minnesota School of Dentistry, Malcolm Moos Health Sciences Tower, 515 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA

4. Department of Statistics, 340 Hardin Hall, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68583, USA

5. Formerly Department of Prosthodontics, Creighton University School of Dentistry, 2109 Cuming Street, Omaha, NE 68102, USA

6. Department of Dentistry, School of Health Sciences, University of Brasilia (UnB), Brasilia 70910-900, Brazil

7. Private Practice, Pine Ridge Dental, 8545 Executive Woods Drive Suite #2, Lincoln, NE 68512, USA

8. Process Engineer, GSK Consumer Healthcare, 1401 Cornhusker Highway, Lincoln, NE 68517, USA

Abstract

Prosthesis discomfort and a lack of skin-like quality is a source of patient dissatisfaction with facial prostheses. To engineer skin-like replacements, knowledge of the differences between facial skin properties and those for prosthetic materials is essential. This project measured six viscoelastic properties (percent laxity, stiffness, elastic deformation, creep, absorbed energy, and percent elasticity) at six facial locations with a suction device in a human adult population equally stratified for age, sex, and race. The same properties were measured for eight facial prosthetic elastomers currently available for clinical usage. The results showed that the prosthetic materials were 1.8 to 6.4 times higher in stiffness, 2 to 4 times lower in absorbed energy, and 2.75 to 9 times lower in viscous creep than facial skin (p < 0.001). Clustering analyses determined that facial skin properties fell into three groups—those associated with body of ear, cheek, and remaining locations. This provides baseline information for designing future replacements for missing facial tissues.

Funder

United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Rehabilitation Research, and Development Service

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Materials Science

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