# Potential Use of a New Energy Vision (NEV) Camera for Diagnostic Support of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Development of a Decision-Making Algorithm to Differentiate Carpal Tunnel-Affected Hands from Controls

**Authors:** Dror Robinson, Mohammad Khatib, Mohammad Eissa, Mustafa Yassin

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15111417 · 2025-06-03

## TL;DR

A new camera system using multispectral imaging and machine learning can accurately detect carpal tunnel syndrome by analyzing skin texture and color.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel decision-making algorithm using NEV camera data to differentiate carpal tunnel syndrome-affected hands from healthy ones.

## Key findings

- The SVM classifier achieved 93.33% accuracy in distinguishing CTS-affected hands from controls.
- Significant differences in color proportions and texture features were found between nerve-damaged and normal areas in CTS patients.

## Abstract

Introduction: Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS) is a prevalent neuropathy requiring accurate, non-invasive diagnostics to minimize patient burden. This study evaluates the New Energy Vision (NEV) camera, an RGB-based multispectral imaging tool, to detect CTS through skin texture and color analysis, developing a machine learning algorithm to distinguish CTS-affected hands from controls. Methods: A two-part observational study included 103 participants (50 controls, 53 CTS patients) in Part 1, using NEV camera images to train a Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifier. Part 2 compared median nerve-damaged (MED) and ulnar nerve-normal (ULN) palm areas in 32 CTS patients. Validations included nerve conduction tests (NCT), Semmes–Weinstein monofilament testing (SWMT), and Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire (BCTQ). Results: The SVM classifier achieved 93.33% accuracy (confusion matrix: [[14, 1], [1, 14]]), with 81.79% cross-validation accuracy. Part 2 identified significant differences (p < 0.05) in color proportions (e.g., red_proportion) and Haralick texture features between MED and ULN areas, corroborated by BCTQ and SWMT. Conclusions: The NEV camera, leveraging multispectral imaging, offers a promising non-invasive CTS diagnostic tool using detection of nerve-related skin changes. Further validation is needed for clinical adoption.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (MONDO:0007275)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CTS (MESH:D002349), MED (MESH:D020423), neuropathy (MESH:D009422)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12154292/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12154292