Login / Signup

WASP: Wearable Analytical Skin Probe for Dynamic Monitoring of Transepidermal Water Loss.

Anjali Devi SivakumarRuchi SharmaChandrakalavathi ThotaDing DingXudong Fan
Published in: ACS sensors (2023)
Early diagnosis of skin barrier dysfunction helps provide timely preventive care against diseases such as atopic dermatitis, psoriasis, food allergies, and other atopic skin disorders. Skin barrier function is commonly evaluated by measuring the transepidermal water loss (TEWL) through stratum corneum due to its noninvasive characteristics. However, existing commercial TEWL devices are significantly affected by many factors, such as ambient temperature, humidity, air flow, water accumulation, initial water contents on the skin surface, bulky sizes, high costs, and requirements for well-controlled environments. Here, we developed a wearable closed-chamber hygrometer-based TEWL device (Wearable Analytical Skin Probe, WASP) and the related algorithm for accurate and continuous monitoring of skin water vapor flux. The WASP uses short dry air purges to dry the skin surface and chamber before each water vapor flux measurement. Its design ensures a highly controlled local environment, such as consistent initial dry conditions for the skin surface and the chamber. We further applied WASP to measure the water vapor flux from six different locations of a small group of human participants. It is found that the WASP can not only measure and distinguish between insensible sweating ( i.e ., TEWL) and sensible sweating ( i.e ., thermal sweating) but also track skin dehydration-rehydration cycles. Comparisons with a commercial TEWL device, AquaFlux, show that the results obtained by both devices agree well. The WASP will be broadly applicable to clinical, cosmetic, and biomedical research.
Keyphrases
  • soft tissue
  • wound healing
  • healthcare
  • air pollution
  • heart rate
  • oxidative stress
  • machine learning
  • climate change
  • chronic pain
  • particulate matter
  • pain management
  • risk assessment
  • induced pluripotent stem cells