Summary:
In the clinical field, reproducible and comparable assessments of skin color are needed for objective evaluation of lesions and efficacy
of treatments. In order to provide objective, quantitative color information in skin lesions, devices such as reflectance spectrophotometer
and reflectance colorimeter have been successfully used during the past decade, though they are too expensive and technically
complex to be handled in routine clinical situations. Reflectance skin color measurements require direct contact of the probe with
the skin, and the compression significantly influences readings. Color measurements obtained from digitized images have been proposed
as a simple and cost-effective way to evaluate skin color and promote efficacy of treatments. The disadvantage is its direct and
close relation to the ambient light: even if an accurate control of subject illumination is provided, readings vary between different laboratories.
We propose a standard system for computerized color image analysis of skin erythrosis modification after Intense Pulsed
Light (IPL) treatments, making it possible to compare readings taken by different observers in different environmental light conditions.
The goal of our study is the introduction of fixed color internal controls in digital imaging in order to calculate a normalization factor of
measurements, resulting not in a method of absolute quantification of erythema or erythrosis but in a method that provides the possibility
of translation and comparison of the red values between systems in different environmental conditions. Between December 2004
and May 2005 we evaluated 30 patients at the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the University “La Sapienza” of
Rome. Three points of standard colored paper (Red Green Blue) were applied with a plastic pattern (standard intersection lines) and
white point in non involved area for skin control. For every patient we took a series of pictures pre-treatment and after a standard cycle
of 5/6 IPL.
We evaluate the grade of reproducibility of our procedure with a careful analysis of pre-treatment digital images obtained in different
environmental conditions.
The statistic analysis of the standard deviation between the values of R obtained (using different light conditions), and the respective
normalized valor (normalized to the referent image), did not show any significant statistical difference and allows us to achieve our
goal: the reproducibility of the results.
Key words:
colorimetry, erythrosis, intense pulsed light, skin
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