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Characterising the biophysical properties of normal and hyperkeratotic foot skin.

Hashmi, F; Nester, C; Wright, C; Newton, V; Lam, S

Authors

F Hashmi

C Wright

V Newton

S Lam



Abstract

BACKGROUND: Plantar foot skin exhibits unique biophysical properties that are distinct from skin on other areas of the body. This paper characterises, using non-invasive methods, the biophysical properties of foot skin in healthy and pathological states including xerosis, heel fissures, calluses and corns. METHODS: Ninety three people participated. Skin hydration, elasticity, collagen and elastin fibre organisation and surface texture was measured from plantar calluses, corns, fissured heel skin and xerotic heel skin. Previously published criteria were applied to classify the severity of each skin lesion and differences in the biophysical properties compared between each classification. RESULTS: Calluses, corns, xerotic heel skin and heel fissures had significantly lower levels of hydration; less elasticity and greater surface texture than unaffected skin sites (p < 0.01). Some evidence was found for a positive correlation between hydration and elasticity data (r ≤ 0.65) at hyperkeratotic sites. Significant differences in skin properties (with the exception of texture) were noted between different classifications of skin lesion. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides benchmark data for healthy and different severities of pathological foot skin. These data have applications ranging from monitoring the quality of foot skin, to measuring the efficacy of therapeutic interventions.

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2015
Deposit Date Jun 5, 2023
Journal J Foot Ankle Res
Print ISSN 1757-1146
Publisher BioMed Central
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 8
Pages 35
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s13047-015-0092-7
Keywords Biophysical parameters, Callus, Corns, Dry skin, Heel fissures, Plantar foot skin hyperkeratosis, Quantification, Skin classification (SELs), Xerosis
Publisher URL https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26269720