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In vivo measurement of the biomechanical...
Journal article

In vivo measurement of the biomechanical properties of human skin with motion-corrected Brillouin microscopy

Abstract

Biomechanical testing of human skin in vivo is important to study the aging process and pathological conditions such as skin cancer. Brillouin microscopy allows the all-optical, non-contact visualization of the mechanical properties of cells and tissues over space. Here, we use the combination of Brillouin microscopy and optical coherence tomography for motion-corrected, depth-resolved biomechanical testing of human skin in vivo. We obtained two peaks in the Brillouin spectra for the epidermis, the first at 7 GHz and the second near 9-10 GHz. The experimentally measured Brillouin frequency shift of the dermis is lower compared to the epidermis and is 6.8 GHz, indicating the lower stiffness of the dermis.

Authors

Romodina MN; Parmar A; Singh K

Journal

Biomedical Optics Express, Vol. 15, No. 3, pp. 1777–1784

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group

Publication Date

March 1, 2024

DOI

10.1364/boe.516032

ISSN

2156-7085

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