PHYSIOLOGICAL IMAGERY GENERATOR SYSTEM AND METHOD
A system and method that generates a physiological imagery of one or more parts of a patient's body are provided. The system and method combine one or more parameters relating to a particular part of the body and then generates the physiological imagery for the part of the body wherein the physiological imagery may have a characteristic that changes based on the state of the patient.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/765,640 filed Apr. 22, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,396,308 issued Jul. 19, 2016. U.S. application Ser. No. 12/765,640 is a non-provisional application of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/171,628 filed on Apr. 22, 2009. All aforementioned applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety as if fully cited herein.
FIELDThe disclosure relates generally to medical visualization and in particular to a system and method that generates imagery for a state of the patient so that the state of the patient can be rapidly visualized.
BACKGROUNDPhysicians are besieged with information overload and a lack of time to see patients. For example, a typical US office-based doctor can spend 7-10 minutes on average per patient, and may see 30 patients per day. In critical settings, such as the ICU, there may be more time spent per patient, but there is a flood of information from multiple sensors, monitors, and ventilators, for example, and often decisions of life-or-death importance must be made within minutes to seconds.
Today's electronic medical records systems present raw information to the doctor, such as a list of individual diagnoses, a list of current medications, and a list of individual lab results. This is wholly insufficient for time-pressed physicians who must read and interpret each individual data point into a mental picture of the state of the patient. This process is fraught with error and is humanly unscalable as the volume of information available for a patient grows without bound. Numbers and words grow exponentially without the ability to cross-correlate or interpret them in a simple, visualizable way that fosters insight into decision making.
Systems exist that provide an anatomical avatar that shows a body part and may have pieces of medical data, such as X-rays, etc. associated with the body part that a doctor/user can access. However, these anatomical avatar systems do not interpret the pieces of medical data nor provide a visual way to assess the state of the patient or the state of a body part/organ system of the patient.
Thus, it is desirable to provide a physiological imagery generating system and method by providing a visualization of the physiology, and it is to this end that the system and method are directed.
The system and method are particularly applicable to a web-based system and it is in this context that the system and method will be described. It will be appreciated, however, that the system and method has greater utility because: 1) the system and method can be implemented in various manners that are within the scope of the system so that the system and method are not limited to the example web-based system described below; and 2) the system and method can be used to generate various different types of physiological imagery and the system and method are not limited to the examples provided below.
The system and method abstracts all medical data points/medical parameters for a patient into visualizable physiologic parameters that are independent of any single data point, and represent the synthesis of multiple related data points into a coherent interpretation of physiology and derangement due to disease. Additionally, the synthesis is performed in real-time, so that the arrival of any single data point can change the entire visualization schema without any human intervention, research, or request. For example, arrival of a profoundly elevated liver function test which infers injury to the bile duct can change the entire interpretation of the function of the organ (in this case, the exocrine function of the liver). Moreover, the physiologic image can be decomposed into reasoned elements so that the doctor can understand the basis for the imagery in an intuitive fashion.
Each physician unit 102 may be a processing unit based device that has sufficient processing power, memory and wireless/wired connectivity circuitry to interact with the physiological imagery unit 104. For example, each physician unit 102 may be a personal computer, a terminal, a laptop computer, a mobile device, a pocket PC device, a smartphone (RIM Blackberry, Apple iPhone, etc.), tablet computer, a mobile phone, a mobile email device, etc. Each physician unit 102 may also include an local physiological image unit 111, such as units 111a, 111b, . . . , 111n, that maybe, in the exemplary web-based client/server implementation, an physiological imagery application (a plurality of lines of computer code stored in the physician unit and executed by the processing unit of the physician unit) that generates and/or displays physiological imagery (See
The physiological imagery unit 104, in one implementation may be implemented as one or more well-known server computers (with the typical well known server computer components) that execute one or more pieces of software. In the web-based example shown in
The system 109 may further include a data store 114, implemented as one or more databases hosted on one or more database servers in the illustrated implementation (that may be part of the unit 104 or remotely located from the unit 104), that includes a plurality of health records 106 for a plurality of patients (which may also be stored in an electronic medical record system that is remote from the system 109), a physiological image generator rules store 108 that stores that various physiological imagery and rules and the physiological images generated for each physiological condition with the understanding that additional physiological images for additional physiological conditions and additional rules for physiological images may be added into the store 108. The system 109 may also include a user portion 116 that may include various pieces of information about the users of the system. For example, the user portion may have a record associated with each physician/user that uses the system that includes, for example, the preferences for each physician/user of the system.
In addition to the web-based implementation described above, the system may also be implemented as a client/server model, a hosted system model, a standalone computer executing a piece of physiological imagery software (that maybe loaded onto a piece of media) or software as a service model in which a physician may send the one or more parameters to the physiological imagery unit 104 that then sends the generated physiological imagery back to the physician unit.
The system 109 may be used to generate physiological imagery in various medical areas. For example, the system 109 may be used to generate physiological imagery to visualize: (1) instantaneous health risk (IHR) according to an organ system, (2) a modifiable health risk (MHR) according to an organ system, (3) a therapeutic analysis of the value of current medications, and (4) an alternative diagnosis probability system. By way of example, a color coded image of an organ might intensify when a combination of lab results appear within a specified time interval. Alternatively, an image might abstract the tolerability of a medication by numerically amalgamating the number and severity of multiple side effects into a single score that can be visualized in a graphical, colorized format. The seminal aspect is therefore consolidation of individual data points into a physiologically interpreted view of the whole.
In operation, the system 109 synthesizes disparate information about a physiological condition in real time into a visual image (the physiological imagery) that is understandable within seconds without the need to read any numbers or text. This interpretive speed does not exist in current electronic medical records and makes the current practice of medicine highly inefficient and riskier due to the time and mental effort required by the physician to create a mental abstraction of the state of the patient. In contrast, the system 109 synthesizes the disparate data about the state of the patient and generates the physiological imagery that visually conveys the state of the patient. Now, several examples of the physiological imagery and the rules to generate the particular physiological imagery are described below. However, the physiological imagery system is not limited to the examples described below nor to the particular states of the patient shown in the examples.
In the system 109, a characteristic of the physiological imagery may be changed to denote different states of the patient or the organ, etc. that allow a user to quickly look at the physiological imagery and determine the state of the patient. The characteristic may be any feature that can be changed to allow someone to visually distinguish between the different states of the patient or the organ, body part, etc. For example, the characteristic may be a color change, a size change, a contrast change, etc. In one implementation, the characteristic of the physiological image may be the color of the physiological image wherein a first color 124a indicates a first state of the patient (such as mild injury to the organ as shown in
The system may have one or more sets of rules (stored in the store 108) for each physiological imagery that determines how the characteristic of the physiological imagery is changed to reflect the different states of the patient, body part, organ system, etc. Each rule may use one or more parameters of the patient state or organ system state, such as alkaline phosphatase (AP) for the bile duct and gall bladder, to determine the characteristic of the physiological imagery. For example, for the gallbladder and bile duct organ system shown in
Light red=(AP 2-3×normal) AND (GGT 2-3×normal) AND (CB<2 times normal) which indicates mild injury of the gallbladder and bile duct organ system;
Medium red=(AP 3-4×normal) AND (GGT 3-4×normal) AND (CB<2 times normal) which indicates moderate injury of the gallbladder and bile duct organ system; and
Bright red=(AP>4×normal) AND (GGT>4×normal) AND (CB<2 times normal) which indicates severe injury of the gallbladder and bile duct organ system.
Using the system, a physician can quickly look at the physiological imagery to determine the state of the patient or an organ system of the patient as shown in
When the physiological imagery is displayed, the physician may click or ‘mouse-over’ the physiological imagery to see the underlying reasoning, the rules for the physiological imagery and the one or more parameters used to generate the physiological imagery (shown in
As another example of the analysis of drug therapy, if the patient were to suddenly have the arrival of a positive pregnancy test results (a parameter that is received by the system 109), the bar for drug safety would become 100 (long and bright red for example) because lisinopril is very dangerous (teratogenic leading to mutations) for a fetus. As above, the physiological imagery is rendered in real-time for the patient and are most commonly multi-factorial Boolean logic expressions (e.g., A or B and not C within time X) which provide a weighted, interpretive image of the potential to beneficially improve care for the example shown in
In the example shown in
In the above examples, it can be seen that a doctor caring for a patient with multiple comorbidities and/or taking multiple medications and/or having multiple surgeries can be assessed in a matter of seconds without reading of raw text or numbers. The specifics of the formulas used underneath each imagery rule (e.g., the combination of lab ranges, physical findings, and patterns for bile duct injury in
The categories of interest described above are basic to the practice of medicine. For example, for any disease the broadest scope of possible interventions are (1) medications, (2) procedures including surgery, (3) lifestyle changes, and (4) monitoring (by office visits and/or lab tests). There are no other fundamental treatment categories, so virtually all diseases can be represented using this visually interpretative fashion. In addition, similar universal categories are standards for medication analysis, regardless of location. That is, all medications are intrinsically evaluated by physicians for (1) efficacy, (2) safety, (3) tolerability, and (4) affordability in every case they are used. What has been missing to date is the rapid, real-time synthesis of all pertinent information to distill these analyses down to simple, visualizable abstract images which support and display the underlying physiologic reasoning as to how they were generated, instantly and without physician effort.
In summary, the physiological imagery system and method allows a physician or other medical health care worker to quickly visualize (based on multiple different pieces of medical information/parameters in real-time) a possible new problem with an organ system (an example of which is shown in
While the foregoing has been with reference to a particular embodiment of the system and method, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes in this embodiment may be made without departing from the principles and spirit of the system and method, the scope of which is defined by the appended claims.
Claims
1. A system for generating a physiological imagery of one of a body part and an organ of a patient, comprising:
- a physiological imagery unit device that receives one or more parameters about a medical state of an organ of a patient; and
- a computer implemented physiological image generator associated with a computing device, said physiological image generator configured to generate a physiological imagery of the organ for the patient based on medical state of the patient as determined by an algorithm executed by said computer implemented physiological image generator that receives said parameters, said physiological image generator comprising a multi-factorial Boolean expression that is specific to the organ which is the subject of the imagery, wherein the physiological imagery being an image of the organ of the patient and wherein said multi-factor Boolean expression determines a display characteristic of the physiological imagery based on medical state of the patient.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the characteristic of the
- physiological imagery comprises one or more different colors based on the medical state of the patient as indicated by the one or more parameters.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein received parameters comprise at least one parameter selected from a list consisting of: health of an organ or an organ system, health of the patient, a drug therapy analysis and a treatment intensity.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein the received parameters comprise a health of an organ or an organ system, wherein the physiological imagery is an image of the organ or organ system and wherein the physiological imagery comprises a color of the image of the organ or organ system to indicate a severity of the injury to the organ or organ system.
5. The system of claim 1, wherein received parameters comprise a drug therapy analysis, wherein the physiological imagery is a bar chart of one or more indicators of the drug therapy analysis and wherein the physiological imagery comprises a color and a length of the bar chart that indicates an action to be taken by a doctor with respect to the drug therapy.
6. The system of claim 1, wherein the received parameters comprise a treatment intensity, wherein the physiological imagery is a bar chart of one or more indicators of the treatment intensity and wherein the physiological imagery further comprises a color and a length of the bar chart that indicate an action to be taken by a doctor with respect to the treatment intensity.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the one or more indicators represent at least one of: a treatment intensity efficacy indication, a treatment procedure intensity indication, a lifestyle intensity indication and a monitoring indication.
8. The system of claim 1 further comprising a physician unit,
- coupled over a link to the physiological imagery unit device, the physician unit being configured to display the physiological imagery so that a user visualizes the medical state of the patient.
9. The system of claim 1, wherein the physiological imagery unit device further comprises the computer implemented physiological image generator so that the physiological imagery is generated on the physiological imagery unit device and wherein the physiological imagery unit device communicates the physiological imagery to the physician unit.
10. The system of claim 8, wherein the physician unit further comprises one of a personal computer, a terminal, a laptop computer, a mobile device, a pocket PC device, a smartphone, a tablet computer, a mobile phone and a mobile email device.
11. A method for generating physiological imagery of an organ of a patient, the method comprising the steps of:
- receiving one or more parameters about a medical state of one of an organ of a patient;
- generating physiological imagery of the organ for the patient using an algorithm comprising a multi-factorial Boolean expression that is specific to the organ based on the one or more parameters, said multi-factorial Boolean expression determining an appearance characteristic of the generated imagery, the physiological imagery being one of the organ; and
- changing a display characteristic of the physiological imagery based on the medical state of the organ of a patient as indicated by an output of the Boolean expression.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the characteristic of the physiological imagery is a color of the physiological imagery and wherein generating the physiological imagery of the patient further comprises generating the physiological imagery having one or more different colors based on the state of the patient as indicated by the one or more parameters.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein at least one of the received parameters is selected from a group consisting of: health of an organ or an organ system, health of the patient, a drug therapy analysis and a treatment intensity.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein at least one of the received parameters is selected from a group consisting of: health of an organ or an organ system, wherein the physiological imagery is an image of the organ or organ system and wherein changing the characteristic of the physiological imagery further comprises changing a color of the image of the organ or organ system to indicate a severity of an injury to the organ or organ system.
15. The method of claim 11, wherein the received parameters comprise data representing an analysis of a drug therapy, wherein the physiological imagery is a bar chart of one or more indicators of the result of the analysis of the drug therapy and wherein changing the characteristic of the physiological imagery further comprises changing one of a color and a length of the one or more indicators to indicate an action to be taken by a doctor with respect to the drug therapy.
16. The method of claim 11, wherein the received parameters comprise data representing a treatment intensity, wherein the physiological imagery is a bar chart of one or more indicators of the treatment intensity and wherein changing the characteristic of the physiological imagery further comprises changing one of a color and a length of the one or more indicators to indicate an action to be taken by a doctor with respect to the treatment intensity.
17. The method of claim 11 further comprising viewing the one or more parameters about a medical state of a patient associated with the physiological imagery by using a pointing device to point to the physiological imagery.
18. The method of claim 11 further comprising viewing, on a physician unit, the physiological imagery so that a user visualizes the medical state of the patient.
19. A system for generating a physiological imagery of an organ of a patient, comprising:
- a physiological imagery unit device that receives one or more parameters about a medical state of an organ of a patient, the received parameters comprise a health of an organ or an organ system;
- a computer implemented physiological image generator, associated with a computing device, that generates a physiological imagery of the organ of the patient, wherein the physiological imagery is an image of the organ or organ system and wherein the physiological imagery further comprises a color of the image of the organ or organ system to indicate a severity of the injury to the organ or organ system based on medical state of the patient; and
- an algorithm executed by said computer implemented physiological image generator that receives said parameters, said physiological image generator comprising a multi-factorial Boolean expression that is specific to the organ which is the subject of the imagery, the multi-factor Boolean expression determines a display characteristic of the physiological imagery based on medical state of the patient.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the received parameters further comprise data representing an analysis of a drug therapy, wherein the physiological imagery further comprises a bar chart of one or more indicators of the result of the analysis of the drug therapy and wherein changing the characteristic of the physiological imagery further comprises changing one of a color and a length of the one or more indicators to indicate an action to be taken by a doctor with respect to the drug therapy.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 18, 2016
Publication Date: Dec 8, 2016
Inventor: Ahmed Ghouri (San Diego, CA)
Application Number: 15/213,165