Visualization of Human Spine Biomechanics for Spinal Surgery
Pepe Eulzer, Sabine Bauer, Francis Kilian, Kai Lawonn

TL;DR
This paper introduces a visualization tool for human spine biomechanics that enhances data exploration, supports personalized surgical planning, and improves accuracy and speed over standard methods, aiding clinical and research applications.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel visualization application with new methods for displaying biomechanical simulation data, including impact force vectors and patient-specific anatomy integration.
Findings
Increased accuracy in data exploration tasks.
Faster data analysis compared to standard representations.
High usefulness ratings from domain experts.
Abstract
We propose a visualization application, designed for the exploration of human spine simulation data. Our goal is to support research in biomechanical spine simulation and advance efforts to implement simulation-backed analysis in surgical applications. Biomechanical simulation is a state-of-the-art technique for analyzing load distributions of spinal structures. Through the inclusion of patient-specific data, such simulations may facilitate personalized treatment and customized surgical interventions. Difficulties in spine modelling and simulation can be partly attributed to poor result representation, which may also be a hindrance when introducing such techniques into a clinical environment. Comparisons of measurements across multiple similar anatomical structures and the integration of temporal data make commonly available diagrams and charts insufficient for an intuitive and…
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