Hyperspectral characterization of re-epithelialization in an in vitro wound model

J Biophotonics. 2020 Oct;13(10):e202000108. doi: 10.1002/jbio.202000108. Epub 2020 Jul 13.

Abstract

In vitro wound models are useful for research on wound re-epithelialization. Hyperspectral imaging represents a non-destructive alternative to histology analysis for detection of re-epithelialization. This study aims to characterize the main optical behavior of a wound model in order to enable development of detection algorithms. K-Means clustering and agglomerative analysis were used to group spatial regions based on the spectral behavior, and an inverse photon transport model was used to explain differences in optical properties. Six samples of the wound model were prepared from human tissue and followed over 22 days. Re-epithelialization occurred at a mean rate of 0.24 mm2 /day after day 8 to 10. Suppression of wound spectral features was the main feature characterizing re-epithelialized and intact tissue. Modeling the photon transport through a diffuse layer placed on top of wound tissue properties reproduced the spectral behavior. The missing top layer represented by wounds is thus optically detectable using hyperspectral imaging.

Keywords: exploratory data analysis; hyperspectral imaging; image processing; photon transport modeling; re-epithelialization; tissue optics; wound healing.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Models, Biological
  • Re-Epithelialization*
  • Wound Healing*