使用患者特异性多体动力学模型设计神经肌肉骨骼疾病的最佳治疗方法。

Benjamin J Fregly
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类神经肌肉骨骼系统的疾病,如骨关节炎、中风、脑瘫和截瘫,会显著影响活动能力,导致生活质量下降。这些疾病的手术和康复治疗计划主要基于通过临床经验过滤的静态解剖测量和动态功能测量。虽然这种主观的治疗计划方法在许多情况下都很有效,但在许多其他情况下,它并不能准确预测功能结果。本文提出了一个愿景,即患者特异性多体动态模型如何作为客观治疗计划方法的基础,以确定个体患者的最佳治疗方法和治疗参数。首先,提出了一种用于构建患者特异性多体动力学模型的计算范式。该模式包括患者特异性骨骼模型、肌肉肌腱模型、神经控制模型和关节接触模型的组合,完整模型的复杂性取决于所解决的临床问题的要求。接下来,介绍了三个临床应用,以说明如何在治疗设计过程中使用这些模型。其中一个应用涉及膝关节骨关节炎康复患者特异性步态调整策略的设计,第二个涉及特定膝关节骨关节炎手术患者特异性手术参数的选择,第三个涉及中风康复患者特异性肌肉刺激模式的设计。论文最后讨论了将这一愿景变为现实需要克服的重要挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Design of Optimal Treatments for Neuromusculoskeletal Disorders using Patient-Specific Multibody Dynamic Models.

Disorders of the human neuromusculoskeletal system such as osteoarthritis, stroke, cerebral palsy, and paraplegia significantly affect mobility and result in a decreased quality of life. Surgical and rehabilitation treatment planning for these disorders is based primarily on static anatomic measurements and dynamic functional measurements filtered through clinical experience. While this subjective treatment planning approach works well in many cases, it does not predict accurate functional outcome in many others. This paper presents a vision for how patient-specific multibody dynamic models can serve as the foundation for an objective treatment planning approach that identifies optimal treatments and treatment parameters on an individual patient basis. First, a computational paradigm is presented for constructing patient-specific multibody dynamic models. This paradigm involves a combination of patient-specific skeletal models, muscle-tendon models, neural control models, and articular contact models, with the complexity of the complete model being dictated by the requirements of the clinical problem being addressed. Next, three clinical applications are presented to illustrate how such models could be used in the treatment design process. One application involves the design of patient-specific gait modification strategies for knee osteoarthritis rehabilitation, a second involves the selection of optimal patient-specific surgical parameters for a particular knee osteoarthritis surgery, and the third involves the design of patient-specific muscle stimulation patterns for stroke rehabilitation. The paper concludes by discussing important challenges that need to be overcome to turn this vision into reality.

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