Parametric Solid Models of the At-Term Uterus From Magnetic Resonance Images

Author:

Louwagie Erin M.1ORCID,Rajasekharan Divya1,Feder Arielle12,Fang Shuyang1ORCID,Nhan-Chang Chia-Ling3,Mourad Mirella45,Myers Kristin M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027

2. Tel Aviv University

3. Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Irving Medical Center, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032

4. Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Columbia University, Irving Medical Center , New York, NY 10032

5. Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Abstract

Abstract Birthing mechanics are poorly understood, though many injuries during childbirth are mechanical, like fetal and maternal tissue damage. Several biomechanical simulation models of parturition have been proposed to investigate birth, but many do not include the uterus. Additionally, most solid models rely on segmenting anatomical structures from clinical images to generate patient geometry, which can be time-consuming. This work presents two new parametric solid modeling methods for generating patient-specific, at-term uterine three-dimensional geometry. Building from an established method of modeling the sagittal uterine shape, this work improves the uterine coronal shape, especially where the fetal head joins the lower uterine wall. Solid models of the uterus and cervix were built from five at-term patients' magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sets. Using anatomy measurements from MRI-segmented models, two parametric models were created—one that employs an averaged coronal uterine shape and one with multiple axial measurements of the coronal uterus. Through finite element analysis, the two new parametric methods were compared to the MRI-segmented high-fidelity method and a previously published elliptical low-fidelity method. A clear improvement in the at-term uterine shape was found using the two new parametric methods, and agreement in principal Lagrange strain directions was observed across all modeling methods. These methods provide an effective and efficient way to generate three-dimensional solid models of patient-specific maternal uterine anatomy, advancing possibilities for future research in computational birthing biomechanics.

Funder

Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

ASME International

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