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Tactile Imaging Sensor Can Help in the Early Detection of Tumors

By Medimaging International staff writers
Posted on 07 Feb 2012


A major part of a medical patient’s physical examination is performed through touch, but the physician can only gather so much information from what he feels. Now, engineers have devised a prototype device that will not only mimic human tactile sensation but also quantify it.

The tactile imaging sensor has been developed by Dr. Chang-Hee Won, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Temple University (Philadelphia, PA, USA). “The human hands have this amazing ability to touch something and tell if it’s soft or hard, if it’s wet, or even its temperature,” said Dr. Won, who is also director of the Control, Sensor, Network, and Perception Laboratory (CSNAP) in Temple’s College of Engineering. “We’re trying to emulate this tactile sensation with a device that will actually quantify this by giving us the mechanical properties of what we are feeling.”

Dr. Won reported that the tactile imaging sensor could help physicians when they feel lumps, lesions, or tumors while doing physical exams on patients by detecting the size and shape of the lesion or tumor, as well as its elasticity and mobility. “Once a doctor feels a lesion, lump, or tumor they can use this device to actually characterize the mechanical properties of the irregularity that they have felt,” he said.

Dr. Won noted that studies have shown that cancerous lesions and tumors are apt to be larger, more irregular in shape, or have harder elasticity. “Using the information gleaned by our device, we can determine the probability of this lesion or tumor being either malignant or benign.”

The portable tactile imaging sensor can be attached to any desktop or laptop computer that has a Firewire cable port. Equipped with four light-emitting diode (LED) lights and a camera, the 4.5-inch device has a flexible transparent elastomer cube on the end, into which light is injected.

When the clinician feels an irregularity while performing a physical exam, he or she can place the sensor against the skin where the irregularity was felt. The sensor uses the total internal reflection principle, which keeps the injected light within the elastomer cube unless an intrusion from a lesion or tumor changes the contour of the elastomer’s surface, in which case the light will reflect out of the cube. The sensor’s camera will then capture the lesion or tumor images caused by the reflected light and they are processed with a novel algorithm developed by the CSNAP Lab to calculate the lesion’s mechanical properties.

Dr. Won stressed that the device is not designed to replace such imaging modalities as mammograms for breast tumors, but to help the primary physician in first obtaining key data. “Most primary physicians’ offices are not equipped to perform tests such as mammograms,” he said. “This device would provide the doctor key information by allowing them to quantify and display the lesion or tumor. With this information, they can decide whether to monitor it or send the patient to a specialist or hospital for a more definitive diagnosis.”

Dr. Won reported that the device is noninvasive and can detect lumps or tumors up to 3 cm under the skin. “If you can feel it with your finger, you can see it with this device.” In addition the devise is also inexpensive. Dr. Wan stated that the prototype costs approximately USD 500.

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Temple University




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