基于本体论的神经外科事件建模和记录工具。

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Patricia Romao, Stefanie Neuenschwander, Chantal Zbinden, Kathleen Seidel, Murat Sariyar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:术中神经电生理监测(IOM)在加强神经外科手术过程中的患者安全方面发挥着关键作用。这项重要技术包括对诱发电位进行连续测量,以提供早期预警并确保关键神经结构得到保护。有效记录具有语义丰富特征的 IOM 事件一直是主要挑战之一。本研究旨在通过开发基于本体的工具来应对这一挑战:我们将IOM文档本体(IOMDO)和相关工具的开发分为三个不同的阶段。第一阶段的重点是本体的创建,借鉴了开放生物和生物医学本体(OBO)的原则。随后的阶段涉及敏捷软件开发,这是一种灵活的方法,可以封装各种需求并迅速制作出原型。最后一个阶段是在真实文献环境中进行实际评估。在这一关键阶段,我们收集了第一手资料,对工具的功能和功效进行了评估。这一阶段的观察结果是进行必要调整的基础,以确保工具的有效利用:本体论的核心实体围绕着 IOM 的核心方面,包括以时间戳、类型、值和位置为特征的测量。多个本体论的概念和术语被整合到了 IOMDO 中,例如解剖学基础模型(FMA)、人类表型本体论(HPO)以及与一般外科术语相关的手术过程模型本体论(OntoSPM)。为扩展本体和相关知识库而开发的软件工具采用 JavaFX 作为用户友好型前台,Apache Jena 作为强大的后台。对该工具的评估包括测试用户,他们一致认为该界面易于访问和使用,即使是那些没有丰富专业技术知识的人也不例外:结论:通过建立一个结构化和标准化的框架来描述 IOM 事件,我们基于本体论的工具有可能提高文档质量,并通过改善知情决策的基础来改善患者护理。此外,研究人员还可以利用语义丰富的数据来确定趋势、模式和手术实践改进领域。要通过基于本体的方法优化文档记录,解决与不良事件本体相关的潜在建模问题至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An ontology-based tool for modeling and documenting events in neurosurgery.

Background: Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IOM) plays a pivotal role in enhancing patient safety during neurosurgical procedures. This vital technique involves the continuous measurement of evoked potentials to provide early warnings and ensure the preservation of critical neural structures. One of the primary challenges has been the effective documentation of IOM events with semantically enriched characterizations. This study aimed to address this challenge by developing an ontology-based tool.

Methods: We structured the development of the IOM Documentation Ontology (IOMDO) and the associated tool into three distinct phases. The initial phase focused on the ontology's creation, drawing from the OBO (Open Biological and Biomedical Ontology) principles. The subsequent phase involved agile software development, a flexible approach to encapsulate the diverse requirements and swiftly produce a prototype. The last phase entailed practical evaluation within real-world documentation settings. This crucial stage enabled us to gather firsthand insights, assessing the tool's functionality and efficacy. The observations made during this phase formed the basis for essential adjustments to ensure the tool's productive utilization.

Results: The core entities of the ontology revolve around central aspects of IOM, including measurements characterized by timestamp, type, values, and location. Concepts and terms of several ontologies were integrated into IOMDO, e.g., the Foundation Model of Anatomy (FMA), the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) and the ontology for surgical process models (OntoSPM) related to general surgical terms. The software tool developed for extending the ontology and the associated knowledge base was built with JavaFX for the user-friendly frontend and Apache Jena for the robust backend. The tool's evaluation involved test users who unanimously found the interface accessible and usable, even for those without extensive technical expertise.

Conclusions: Through the establishment of a structured and standardized framework for characterizing IOM events, our ontology-based tool holds the potential to enhance the quality of documentation, benefiting patient care by improving the foundation for informed decision-making. Furthermore, researchers can leverage the semantically enriched data to identify trends, patterns, and areas for surgical practice enhancement. To optimize documentation through ontology-based approaches, it's crucial to address potential modeling issues that are associated with the Ontology of Adverse Events.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
5.70%
发文量
297
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in relation to the design, development, implementation, use, and evaluation of health information technologies and decision-making for human health.
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