Author:
Ramirez-GarciaLuna Jose L.,Martinez-Jimenez Mario A.,Fraser Robert D. J.,Bartlett Robert,Lorincz Amy,Liu Zheng,Saiko Gennadi,Berry Gregory K.
Abstract
IntroductionClinical signs and symptoms (CSS) of infection are a standard part of wound care, yet they can have low specificity and sensitivity, which can further vary due to clinician knowledge, experience, and education. Wound photography is becoming more widely adopted to support wound care. Thermography has been studied in the medical literature to assess signs of perfusion and inflammation for decades. Bacterial fluorescence has recently emerged as a valuable tool to detect a high bacterial load within wounds. Combining these modalities offers a potential objective screening tool for wound infection.MethodsA multi-center prospective study of 66 outpatient wound care patients used hyperspectral imaging to collect visible light, thermography, and bacterial fluorescence images. Wounds were assessed and screened using the International Wound Infection Institute (IWII) checklist for CSS of infection. Principal component analysis was performed on the images to identify wounds presenting as infected, inflamed, or non-infected.ResultsThe model could accurately predict all three wound classes (infected, inflamed, and non-infected) with an accuracy of 74%. They performed best on infected wounds (100% sensitivity and 91% specificity) compared to non-inflamed (sensitivity 94%, specificity 70%) and inflamed wounds (85% sensitivity, 77% specificity).DiscussionCombining multiple imaging modalities enables the application of models to improve wound assessment. Infection detection by CSS is vulnerable to subjective interpretation and variability based on clinicians' education and skills. Enabling clinicians to use point-of-care hyperspectral imaging may allow earlier infection detection and intervention, possibly preventing delays in wound healing and minimizing adverse events.
Reference35 articles.
1. Enhanced bone remodeling after fracture priming;Ramirez-GarciaLuna;Calcif Tissue Int.,2022
2. The physiology of wound healing;Harper;Surgery (Oxford).,2014
3. Wound infection: a review of qualitative and quantitative assessment modalities;Johnson;J Plastic, Reconstruct Aesthetic Surg.,2022
4. Wound Infection In Clinical Practice2022
5. The inter-rater reliability of the clinical signs and symptoms checklist in diabetic foot ulcers;Gardner;Ostomy Wound Manage.,2007
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献