Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/34266

Title: Clinical usefulness of infrared thermography to detect sick animals: frequent and current cases
Authors: Mota-Rojas, Daniel
Martinez-Burnes, Julio
Gomez-Prado, Jocelyn
Casas-Alvarado, Alejandro
Dominguez-Oliva, Adriana
Rodriguez-Gonzalez, Daniela
Pereira, Alfredo
Keywords: domestic animals
pain
pathology
infrared thermography
Issue Date: 22-Aug-2022
Publisher: CABI Reviews
Citation: Mota-Rojas et al. CABI Reviews (2022) 17, No. 040 doi: 10.1079/cabireviews202217040
Abstract: Infrared thermography (IRT) is a tool that has been studied extensively in the experimental medical field as a method for assessing surface thermal responses under various conditions. These may involve local inflammatory processes resulting from surgical procedures, wounds, neoplasms, pathologies, painful events, or stressful states in animals. IRT measures changes in blood flow in surface blood capillaries and the resulting heat radiation. In the clinical field, thermography has been used as a support method for detecting painful conditions. However, some guidelines indicate that it could be applied for assessing and monitoring animals in rehabilitation to quantify objectively possible improvements in their quality of life. Similarly, IRT makes it possible to assess the degree of circulation in dermal tissue, suggesting that it could be used to determine the degree of damage in traumatized tissue in cases of thromboembolic diseases and burns. This would be useful to distinguish between damaged and healthy tissue and thus determine the optimal therapy for burn patients. This review aims to analyze scientific evidence on the clinical applications of IRT for detecting diseases and assessing painful conditions. A literature search on different databases was performed to recover articles related to the application of IRT as a complementary diagnostic tool, and its potential for assisting in rehabilitation, monitoring wounds, and evaluating body temperature in domestic animals.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/34266
Type: article
Appears in Collections:MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Sem Arbitragem Científica

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