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Automatic generation of personalised skeletal models of the lower limb from three-dimensional bone geometries.

Authors :
Modenese, Luca
Renault, Jean-Baptiste
Source :
Journal of Biomechanics. Feb2021, Vol. 116, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The generation of personalised and patient-specific musculoskeletal models is currently a cumbersome and time-consuming task that normally requires several processing hours and trained operators. We believe that this aspect discourages the use of computational models even when appropriate data are available and personalised biomechanical analysis would be beneficial. In this paper we present a computational tool that enables the fully automatic generation of skeletal models of the lower limb from three-dimensional bone geometries, normally obtained by segmentation of medical images. This tool was evaluated against four manually created lower limb models finding remarkable agreement in the computed joint parameters, well within human operator repeatability. The coordinate systems origins were identified with maximum differences between 0.5 mm (hip joint) and 5.9 mm (subtalar joint), while the joint axes presented discrepancies between 1° (knee joint) to 11° (subtalar joint). To prove the robustness of the methodology, the models were built from four datasets including both genders, anatomies ranging from juvenile to elderly and bone geometries reconstructed from high-quality computed tomography as well as lower-quality magnetic resonance imaging scans. The entire workflow, implemented in MATLAB scripting language, executed in seconds and required no operator intervention, creating lower extremity models ready to use for kinematic and kinetic analysis or as baselines for more advanced musculoskeletal modelling approaches, of which we provide some practical examples. We auspicate that this technical advancement, together with upcoming progress in medical image segmentation techniques, will promote the use of personalised models in larger-scale studies than those hitherto undertaken. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219290
Volume :
116
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biomechanics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148545072
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2020.110186