M-HEALTH By PHARMAGEEK
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M HEALTH...and Mobile marketing - Mobile, Ipad and Apps.. #mhealth #ehealth #healthapps
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Smartphone images identify acne and mouth bacteria

Smartphone images identify acne and mouth bacteria | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

Researchers have figured out a way to use images from a smartphone to identify potentially harmful bacteria on the skin and in the mouth.

 

A new method that uses smartphone-derived images can identify potentially harmful bacteria on the skin and in the mouth, research shows.

 

The approach can visually identify microbes on skin contributing to acne and slow wound healing, as well as bacteria in the oral cavity that can cause gingivitis and dental plaques.

 

Researchers combined a smartphone-case modification with image-processing methods to illuminate bacteria on images taken by a conventional smartphone camera. This approach yielded a relatively low-cost and quick method that could be used at home.

 

The team augmented a smartphone camera’s capabilities by attaching a small 3D-printed ring containing 10 LED black lights around a smartphone case’s camera opening. The researchers used the LED-augmented smartphone to take images of the oral cavity and skin on the face of two research subjects.

 

The LED lights ‘excite’ a class of bacteria-derived molecules called porphyrins, causing them to emit a red fluorescent signal that the smartphone camera can then pick up

 

Other components in the image—such as proteins or oily molecules our bodies produce, as well as skin, teeth, and gums—won’t glow red under LED. They’ll fluoresce in other colors.

 

The LED illumination gave the team enough visual information to computationally “convert” the RGB colors from the smartphone-derived images into other wavelengths in the visual spectrum. This generates a “pseudo-multispectral” image consisting of 15 different sections of the visual spectrum—rather than the three in the original RGB image.

 

Obtaining this visual information up front would have required expensive and cumbersome lights, rather than using the relatively inexpensive LED black lights

 

With their greater degree of visual discrimination, the pseudo-multispectral images clearly resolved porphyrin clusters on the skin and within the oral cavity. In addition, though they tailored this method to show porphyrin, researchers could modify the image-analysis pipeline to detect other bacterial signatures that also fluoresce under LED.

 

 

read the study at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.optlaseng.2021.106546

 

read the original unedited article at https://www.futurity.org/smartphone-images-skin-mouth-bacteria-2581642/

 

 


Via nrip
Richard Platt's curator insight, June 18, 2021 12:54 PM

Researchers have figured out a way to use images from a smartphone to identify potentially harmful bacteria on the skin and in the mouth.  A new method using smartphone-derived images can identify potentially harmful bacteria on the skin and in the mouth, research shows.  The approach visually identifies microbes on the skin contributing to acne and slow wound healing, as well as bacteria in the oral cavity that can cause gingivitis and dental plaques. Researchers combined a smartphone-case modification with image-processing methods to illuminate bacteria on images taken by a conventional smartphone camera. This approach yielded a relatively low-cost and quick method that could be used at home.  Augmenting a smartphone camera’s capabilities by attaching a small 3D-printed ring containing 10 LED black lights around a smartphone case’s camera opening. The researchers used the LED-augmented smartphone to take images of the oral cavity and skin on the face of two research subjects. The LED lights ‘excite’ a class of bacteria-derived molecules called porphyrins, causing them to emit a red fluorescent signal that the smartphone camera can then pick up.   

Other components in the image—such as proteins or oily molecules our bodies produce, as well as skin, teeth, and gums—won’t glow red under LED. They’ll fluoresce in other colors.

Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from healthcare technology
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Mobile tech reshaping the health sector

Mobile tech reshaping the health sector | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

Your smartphone is not only your best friend, it's also become your personal trainer, coach, medical lab and maybe even your doctor.


"Digital health" has become a key focus for the technology industry, from modest startups' focus on apps to the biggest companies in the sector seeking to find ways to address key issues of health and wellness.


Apps that measure heart rate, blood pressure, glucose and other bodily functions are multiplying, while Google, Apple and Samsung have launched platforms that make it easier to integrate medical and health services.


"We've gotten to a point where with sensors either in the phone or wearables gather information that we couldn't do in the past without going to a medical center," says Gerry Purdy, analyst at Compass Intelligence.


"You can do the heart rate, mobile EKGs (electrocardiograms). Costs are coming down, and these sensors are becoming more socially acceptable."


The consultancy Rock Health estimates 143 digital health companies raised $2.3 billion in the first six months of 2014, already topping last year's amount.


Recent studies suggest that people who use connected devices to monitor health and fitness often do a better job of managing and preventing health problems.


A study led by the Center for Connected Health found that people who use mobile devices did a better job of lowering dangerous blood pressure and blood sugar levels.


A separate study published in the July 2014 issue of Health Affairs found that data collected by devices is not only useful for patients but can help doctors find better treatments.


"When linked to the rest of the available electronic data, patient-generated health data completes the big data picture of real people's needs, life beyond the health care system," said Amy Abernethy, a Duke University professor of medicine lead author of the study.


Some firms have even more ambitious plans for health technology.


Google, for example, is developing a connecting contract lens which can help monitor diabetics and has set up a new company called Calico to focus on health and well-being, hinting at cooperation with rivals such as Apple. And IBM is using its Watson supercomputer for medical purposes including finding the right cancer treatment.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-07-mobile-tech-reshaping-health-sector.html#jCp



Via nrip
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Doctors Say They Recommend mHealth Apps to Patients, But Patients Say They Don't!

Doctors Say They Recommend mHealth Apps to Patients, But Patients Say They Don't! | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

A survey conducted by Nielsen on behalf of the Council of Accountable Physician Practices (CAPP) finds that, at most, 52 percent of primary care physicians have recommended that their patients use an mHealth app or device to track their health. Yet only 4 percent to 5 percent of consumers surveyed say their PCP has made such a recommendation.

 

This means that either physicians are making the effort but their patients are ignoring the advice, or patients are looking for that guidance but it isn’t coming from their doctors.

 

The survey reached a familiar conclusion in how each generation perceives mHealth and telehealth.

 

It found that consumers rarely use video visits (only 5 percent total), but those age 34 and younger are twice as likely to use and want them than those age 65 and older.

 

The same discrepancy was seen in the use of text reminders for medication and health measurements and online scheduling tools.

 

more at : http://mhealthintelligence.com/news/do-doctors-patients-take-mhealth-seriously

 


Via nrip, Pharma Guy
Pharma Guy's curator insight, November 3, 2016 10:21 AM

Someone's not being truthful :)

 

Related articles: “AMA Survey Finds That Many Physicians Are Enthusiastic About Digital Health Tools, But Few Currently Use Them”; http://sco.lt/8b9r97 and “Do Patients Rely on Mobile Healthcare Apps More Than Their Doctors?”; http://sco.lt/5HSTrN