Representative scenario

A 3D anatomical model to align planning and improve a complex clinical conversation

This scenario describes how a hospital or specialist team could use a 3D anatomical model to improve spatial understanding, interdisciplinary communication, and preparation around a more complex case.

3D surgical planning · Anatomical model for surgery

This content describes a representative situation. It does not identify a specific client or disclose confidential information.

Representative 3D anatomical model case

When screen-based imaging alone is not enough for confident decisions

In some cases the challenge is not having more information, but understanding it better. That is where an anatomical model can become real support for interpretation, alignment, and explanation.

Typical situation

  • The anatomy is complex and difficult to interpret clearly.
  • The team needs a physical reference to discuss the case.
  • The patient or family needs a clearer explanation.

What needs to be solved

An anatomical representation that helps transform a complex case into a more ordered, visual, and precise clinical conversation.

How this scenario could be addressed

The key is understanding which decision or clinical conversation the model must improve, not only which structure should be represented.

1

Define the objective

Clarify whether the main use is planning, teaching, or clinical communication.

2

Shape the model

Adjust the level of anatomical detail and the physical format to how the team will actually use it.

3

Use it inside the process

The model becomes a support for discussion, planning, and understanding, not an isolated visual object.

What value it generates

The strength of the scenario lies in making complex anatomy easier to understand, align around, and explain.

Results it can unlock

  • Better spatial understanding of the case.
  • Stronger alignment across specialists and decision-makers.
  • Clearer explanations for patients, families, and learners.