IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine (Jan 2022)

The Compressiometer: Toward a New Skin Tensiometer for Research and Surgical Planning

  • Karlijn M. J. Scheepens,
  • Nick Marsidi,
  • Roel. E. Genders,
  • Tim Horeman-Franse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JTEHM.2021.3133485
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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After surgery, around 35% of patients experience problems of excessive scarring, causing disfiguring and impaired function. An incision placed in the wrong direction causes unnecessary skin tension on the wound, resulting in increased collagen disposition and potentially hypertrophic scars. Currently, skin tension lines are used for incision planning. However, these lines are not universal and are a static representation of the skin tension that is in fact under influence of muscle action. By designing a new skin force measurement device the authors intend to make research on dynamic skin characteristics possible and to objectify incision planning and excision closure planning. The device applies a known compressive force to the skin in standardized directions and measures the displacement of the skin. This allows users to measure the skin reaction force in response to compression and to determine the optimal incision line or best wound closure direction. The device has an accuracy of 96% and a sensitivity of < 0.01 mm. It is compact, works non-invasively and standardizes measurement directions and is therefore an improvement over previously designed skin tensiometers.

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