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  1. Hamidreza Mohafez, Siti Anom Ahmad, Mohammad Hamiruce Marhaban, Maryam Hadizadeh, Mohammad Iqbal Saripan
    MyJurnal
    Non-invasive imaging modalities for wound assessment have become increasingly popular over the past
    two decades. The wounds can be developed superficially or from within deep tissues, depending on the
    nature of the dominant risk factors. Developing a reproducible quantitative method to assess woundhealing
    status has demonstrated to be a convoluted task. Advances in High-Frequency Ultrasound (HFU)
    skin scanners have expanded their application as they are cost-effective and reproducible diagnostic tools
    in dermatology, including for the measurement of skin thickness, the assessment of skin tumours, the
    estimation of the volume of melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers, the visualisation of skin structure
    and the monitoring of the healing of acute and chronic wounds. Previous studies have revealed that HFU
    images carry dominant parameters and depict the phenomena occurring within deep tissue layers during
    the wound-healing process. However, the investigations have mostly focussed on the validation of HFU
    images, and few studies have utilised HFU imaging in quantitative assessment of wound generation and
    healing. This paper is an introductory review of the
    important studies proposed by the researchers in
    the context of wound assessment. The principles
    of dermasonography are briefly explained,
    followed by a review of the relevant literature that
    investigated the wound-healing process and tissue
    structures within the wound using HFU imaging.
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