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Educational materials advocating whole-body donation must be accurate, easy to read, and transparent, as one potential solution to the fact that the supply of donations is not keeping pace with educational demand, thereby disrupting anatomy education programs. The use of AI technologies to supplement communications with prospective donors and next of kin deserves investigation to determine whether LLM-based approaches meet the common requirements for effective communication. This study contributes to the limited literature on LLM-supported communications by presenting a comparative quantitative benchmark and an adaptable evaluation framework. Five LLMs (ChatGPT-4o, Grok3.0, Claude4Sonnet, Gemini2.5 Flash, DeepSeekR1) were used to generate responses to six frequently asked questions about body donation in Turkish. Four anatomists evaluated accuracy, quality, readability, and vocabulary diversity. Differences between models were statistically analyzed. The two top-performing models, ChatGPT-4o and Grok3.0, achieved mean quality scores of 21.7 ± 2.8 and 21.0 ± 5.1 on a 25-point checklist, and 4.58 ± 0.88 and 4.25 ± 1.03 on a 5-point global quality scale, significantly outperforming the remaining three systems (p < 0.037). Both maintained a below-secondary-school level on two validated readability indices (scores ≥67.8 and ≥40.2). LLM-produced body donation materials (e.g., informational texts and FAQs) may help promote the importance of whole-body donations by providing accessible and reliable information, potentially streamlining the creation of first drafts and reducing staff workload. Given the sensitivity of donation decisions, ethical transparency, cultural sensitivity, and continuous human oversight are essential safeguards. Therefore, LLM use for such purposes should be governed by clear governance frameworks, regular expert audits, and publicly disclosed quality metrics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ase.70120 | DOI Listing |
Anat Sci Educ
September 2025
Department of Anatomy, Hamidiye Faculty of Medicine, University of Health Sciences, Istanbul, Turkey.
Educational materials advocating whole-body donation must be accurate, easy to read, and transparent, as one potential solution to the fact that the supply of donations is not keeping pace with educational demand, thereby disrupting anatomy education programs. The use of AI technologies to supplement communications with prospective donors and next of kin deserves investigation to determine whether LLM-based approaches meet the common requirements for effective communication. This study contributes to the limited literature on LLM-supported communications by presenting a comparative quantitative benchmark and an adaptable evaluation framework.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnat Sci Educ
September 2025
Human Anatomy, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy.
As emerging technologies reshape both the body and how we represent it, anatomical education stands at a threshold. Virtual dissection tools, AI-generated images, and immersive platforms are redefining how students learn anatomy, while real-world bodies are becoming hybridized through implants, neural interfaces, and bioengineered components. This Viewpoint explores what it means to teach human anatomy when the body is no longer entirely natural, and the image is no longer entirely real.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Radiol
August 2025
Department of Physiatry and Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Zaragoza 50009 Zaragoza, Spain; iHealthy Research Group, University of Zaragoza/IIS Aragon, Zaragoza, Spain. Electronic address:
Purpose: Osteoarthritis of the trapeziometacarpal joint is very common, especially in females, and is closely associated with ligamentous laxity and joint subluxation. The dorsoradial ligament (DRL) remains largely unexplored in ultrasound studies despite its clinical relevance. This study aimed to identify the central fascicle of the DRL anatomically and ultrasonographically and to establish a standardized ultrasound examination protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
August 2025
Anatomy, Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine (AZCOM) Midwestern University, Glendale, USA.
This case study focuses on the atypical nerve contributions and branching patterns of the lumbar plexus in two human body donors at Midwestern University. It discusses their implications for pathology and surgical outcomes. Variations were identified in the anterior rami contributions and branching patterns of the lumbar plexus in both donors, predominantly in the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve (LFCN).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Wound J
September 2025
Department of Pathology, Dr. Ernesto Torres Galdames Hospital, Iquique, Chile.
Skin allografts are essential in managing complex wounds, yet their availability is limited by low post-mortem donation rates. Skin harvested during body contouring surgeries offers a novel and sustainable source to expand tissue supply. We conducted a retrospective descriptive study at the Tarapacá Skin and Tissue Bank from January 2022 to December 2024.
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