4.4 Article

3D printing-assisted fabrication of double-layered optical tissue phantoms for laser tattoo treatments

Journal

LASERS IN SURGERY AND MEDICINE
Volume 48, Issue 4, Pages 392-399

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/lsm.22469

Keywords

skin phantom; 3D printing; optical properties; compression modulus

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Background and ObjectiveArtificial skin phantoms have been developed as an alternative tissue for human skin experiments due to convenient use and easy storage. However, fabricating both thin (approximate to 100m) epidermis and relatively thick dermis is often cumbersome, and most developed phantoms have hardly reflected specific human skin types. The objective of this study was to fabricate skin phantoms with 3D printing technique to emulate various human skin types (I-VI) along with the corresponding optical and mechanical properties for laser tattoo removal. Study Design/Materials and MethodsBoth gelatin and agar powders were mixed with coffee and TiO2 particles to fabricate skin phantoms with materials properties for various skin types (I-VI). A 3D printer was employed to precisely control the thickness of each phantom for epidermis and dermis layers. A number of concentrations of the coffee and TiO2 particles were used to determine the degree of absorption and scattering effects in various skin types. The optical properties between 500 and 1,000nm for the fabricated phantoms were measured by double-integrating spheres with an inverse adding-doubling (IAD) algorithm. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) and rheometer were also utilized to evaluate optical (absorption and reduced scattering coefficients) and mechanical properties (compression modulus) of the fabricated phantoms, respectively. ResultsVisible color inspections presented that the skin phantoms for types I, III, and VI similarly emulated the color space of the human skin types. The optical property measurements demonstrated that the absorption ((a)) and reduced scattering ((s)) coefficients decreased with wavelengths. Compared to the human skin type VI, a dermis phantom represented quite equivalent values of (a) and (s) whereas an epidermis phantom showed up to 30% lower (a) but almost identical (s) over the wavelengths. The OCT measurements confirmed that the thicknesses of the epidermis and the dermis phantoms were measured to be 138.500.01m and 0.81 +/- 0.04mm, respectively. The mechanical properties of the phantoms mixed with the agar volume of 40% yielded a compression modulus of 83.7 +/- 14.8kPa, which well corresponded to that of human forearm skin (50-95kPa). ConclusionThe 3D printing technique was able to reliably fabricate the double-layered phantoms emulating a variety of skin types (I-VI) along with the comparable optical and mechanical properties. Further investigations will incorporate artificial chromophores into the fabricated skin phantoms to reliably evaluate the new therapeutic wavelengths for laser tattoo removal. Lasers Surg. Med. 48:392-399, 2016. (c) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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