Despite the
limitations caused by the COVID19 pandemic, the department continues to be
successful in science in compliance with all quarantine requirements.
Yes,
students of gr. BIBMI-18-1 Olga Isaeva and Anastasia Kovaleva under the
guidance of Professor Oleg Avrunin study such modern areas of biomedical
engineering as video dermoscopy and capillaroscopy.
In the process of studying
such a method of diagnosing skin diseases as videodermoscopy in the ultraviolet
spectrum, Olga practices in the methods of processing dermatoscopic images, in
particular methods of automatic segmentation and analysis of videodermoscopic
images. This is a very important scientific task for both dermatology and
cosmetic testing.
Anastasia is studying the possibilities of optical
capillaroscopy to determine disorders of microcirculation, as well as methods
of calibration of equipment for microscopy and segmentation of images of
microvessels. The state of microcirculation – an important diagnostic criterion
– in fact, there is no disease in which the microcirculatory system of a person
does not suffer, regardless of age.
Their first scientific results have already
been successfully published at several student conferences and forums.
And now
the students have prepared a joint international publication: theses with their
co-authorship are published in the list of theoretical and applied publications
of the International Society of Optics and Photonics – Society of Photo-Optical
Instrumentation Engineers – SPIE Digital Library indexed in the scientometric
database Scopus:
Kovalova, A., Shushliapina, N., Avrunin, O., Zlepko, A. et al.
(2020) Possibilities of automated image processing at optical capillaroscopy.
Paper presented at the Proceedings of SPIE – the International Society for
Optical Engineering, 11456 doi: 10.1117 / 12.2569772;
Isaieva, O., Avrunin, O.,
Moroz, I., Stoliarenko, O. et al. (2020) Features of image analysis under UV-
video dermoscopy. Paper presented at the Proceedings of SPIE – the
International Society for Optical Engineering, 11456 doi: 10.1117 / 12.2569774.
We wish young scientists further interesting developments and successful
participation in competitions of student scientific works.