Paper
5 March 2015 Imaging calcium carbonate distribution in human sweat pore in vivo using nonlinear microscopy
Xueqin Chen, Alicja Gasecka, Florian Formanek, Jean-Baptiste Galey, Hervé Rigneault
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Abstract
Nonlinear microscopies, including two-photon excited autofluorescence (TPEF) and coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS), were used to study individual human sweat pore morphology and topically applied antiperspirant salt penetration inside sweat pore, in vivo on human palms. Sweat pore inner morphology in vivo was imaged up to the depth of 100 μm by TPEF microscopy. The 3D penetration and distribution of “in situ calcium carbonate” (isCC), an antiperspirant salt model, was investigated using CARS microscopy.
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Xueqin Chen, Alicja Gasecka, Florian Formanek, Jean-Baptiste Galey, and Hervé Rigneault "Imaging calcium carbonate distribution in human sweat pore in vivo using nonlinear microscopy", Proc. SPIE 9329, Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences XV, 93292H (5 March 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2076904
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KEYWORDS
Microscopy

In vivo imaging

Crystals

Skin

Calcium

Carbonates

3D image processing

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