THERMOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING
What Can a Thermogram Show?

What Can a Thermogram Show?

Thermogram Findings Overview

Thermography documents the body’s surface heat patterns – and because those patterns are shaped by circulation, autonomic activity, and inflammation-related warmth, a thermogram often gives patients and practitioners a view of physiology they cannot get any other way. No single image diagnoses a condition; every finding earns its meaning through clinical correlation. Here is where thermal imaging earns its keep at TDI.

Breast Health

The most requested study we perform. Infrared imaging documents thermal symmetry and vascular patterning across both breasts and builds a baseline for year-over-year comparison – all without compression or radiation, and unaffected by breast density or implants. Breast thermography is an adjunct to mammography and clinical breast care. Learn more about Breast Thermography.

Pain and Neuromuscular Concerns

Pain is invisible on most tests – but pain-related physiology often is not. Thermal imaging objectively documents side-to-side temperature asymmetries and vascular patterns in regions affected by nerve irritation, myofascial strain, and autonomic changes, giving treating physicians a visual, measurable record to correlate with examination, EMG, and structural imaging. This has been a TDI specialty since our founding by Philip Getson, D.O. Learn more about Pain Evaluation.

Thyroid, Dental, Sinus, and TMJ Regions

The face and neck are thermally busy territory. Our facial-thyroid-dental study maps warmth across the thyroid region, jawline, dental arches, and sinuses – areas where unusual heat patterns can be worth showing your physician, dentist, or ENT. The thermogram doesn’t diagnose thyroid disease or dental infection; it hands your providers a physiological map they otherwise wouldn’t have. Learn more about Facial-Thyroid-Dental Thermography.

Upper and Lower Body

Regional studies of the back, spine, abdomen, arms, hands, hips, legs, and feet document heat-pattern asymmetries related to posture, circulation, repetitive strain, and athletic stress – and create a baseline for tracking how your patterns change over time. Learn more about Upper Body and Lower Body Thermography.

Ready to Look?

Every study is captured by board-certified technicians under controlled conditions and interpreted by a Board-Certified Clinical Thermologist, with a written report you can share with any practitioner. Call 856-596-5834 or book online at our Marlton office or a satellite location near you.

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