Burn Injury Assessment Tool with Morphable 3D Human Body Models

Abstract

Bum patient outcomes are dependent on the wound surface area as a percent of the total body surface area (%TBSA), bum locations, bum depth, and patient age. %TBSA is essential in determining fluid resuscitation and nutrition support, and surgical intervention and rehabilitation planning. The proposed burn injury assessment software tool is aimed at increasing %TBSA accuracy by improving on both TBSA and bum area estimations. Conventional methods (Rule-of-Palm/Nines and Lund-Browder chart) use a generic 2D body shape diagram to represent the human body which lacks the capability to capture 3D anthropometric variability of actual human body shapes, resulting in inaccurate % TBSA. This burn assessment tool will include an interactive anthropometry based human body generator to create, in real-time, a personalized 3D body shape model that has been morphed according to available subset of adjustable anthropometric measurements (weight, age, gender, height, waist, arms and legs measurements) as stored in most anthropometry databases. To improve on bum area estimations, the bum tool will allow the user to interactively demarcate burn areas of varying severity directly on the personalized 3D model for calculation of% TBSA. Photographic image assisted burn demarcation and Android version of the prototype were developed.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 21, 2017
Accession Number
AD1032948

Entities

People

  • Andrzej Przekwas
  • David N. Herndon
  • Kay Sun
  • Keith Sedberry
  • Michael Rossi
  • Vincent Harrand
  • Xianlian Zhou

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Accuracy
  • Body Regions
  • Burns
  • Computer Programming
  • Computer-Aided Design
  • Computers
  • Databases
  • Graphical User Interface
  • Health Services
  • Human Body
  • Images
  • Measurement
  • Medical Personnel
  • Mobile Operating Systems
  • Operating Systems
  • Photographic Images
  • Tablet Computers

Readers

  • Database Systems and Applications
  • Exercise and Sports Science.
  • Trauma Surgery or Emergency Medicine.