Paper
19 July 2019 Diagnosis of inflammatory diseases of the paranasal sinuses using digital diaphanoscopy
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Abstract
Diagnosis of inflammatory diseases of the paranasal sinuses is one of the urgent problems of modern otolaryngology. Presently, radiography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, rhinoscopy and ultrasound are used to identify these pathologies. However, due to use of carcinogenic roentgen radiation during the study, a high level of falsenegative results and painfulness of the diagnostic procedures, application of these methods is limited. To overcome these shortcomings, the application of the digital diaphanoscopy method seems to be promising. For realization of this approach the experimental setup was designed and assembled. Low-intensity radiation of the visible and near IR ranges and CMOS-camera were used for translucence of the paranasal sinuses and visualizing the pattern of scattering light. To identify the range of exposure values of the CMOS-camera to obtain maximum sensitivity to identify of pathological changes, experimental studies were conducted on healthy volunteers and patients with inflammatory diseases of paranasal sinuses. During the studies the exposure time of CMOS-camera changed in the range from 0 to 39.7 ms with a step of 1 ms, followed by comparison of the results of digital diaphanoscopy with results of MRI. The results of study 20 volunteers and 15 patients of different genders and ages showed variations in the scattering patterns with the same exposure time. This was explained by such anatomic features as the structure of the skin, the thickness of the skull bone tissue, the size of the sinuses and their asymmetry.
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
E. O. Bryanskaya, I. N. Makovik, A. G. Bukin, O. A. Bibikova, B. M. Shuraev, O. Minet, U. Zabarylo, A. V. Dunaev, and V. G. Artyushenko "Diagnosis of inflammatory diseases of the paranasal sinuses using digital diaphanoscopy", Proc. SPIE 11073, Clinical and Preclinical Optical Diagnostics II, 110731P (19 July 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2526835
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KEYWORDS
Light scattering

Magnetic resonance imaging

Visible radiation

Scattering

Pathology

Diagnostics

Image processing

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