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%T Development of an Anatomical Variants Database for Teaching and Clinical Applications
%A Agboola, Olasoji O.
%A Adenowo, Thomas K.
%J Path of Science
%N 8
%P 8015-8020
%V 11
%D 2025
%K anatomical variants; medical education, Nigerian healthcare; population-specific anatomy; database development; healthcare technology implementation
%@ 2413-9009
%U https://pathofscience.org/index.php/ps/article/view/3632/1786
%X Medical education lacks systematic approaches to instruction on anatomical variants, despite the documented clinical significance of morphological diversity in patient care. This study aimed to develop a comprehensive methodological framework for constructing an anatomical variants database adaptable across diverse institutional contexts. We developed a systematic framework using a literature analysis of 47 eligible sources, expert consultation protocols with anatomical specialists, and technical architecture specifications drawn from established medical education database standards. Framework development employed systematic literature searches across PubMed, EMBASE, and Google Scholar databases, structured expert consultation procedures, and technical specification protocols based on principles of medical education technology development. The resulting framework comprises four sequential development phases, incorporating 47 specific procedural steps and 23 quality assurance checkpoints. Technical architecture specifications establish relational database structures using MySQL, featuring 14 primary entity tables. Performance benchmarks achieved sub-0.5-second query responses, and scalability requirements supported over 500 concurrent users, meeting 99% uptime standards. Content validation protocols employed modified Delphi methodology with 80% expert consensus thresholds, whilst quality assurance procedures specified accuracy verification, consistency checking, and educational appropriateness assessment criteria. The framework addresses multidimensional classification schemes for frequency patterns, clinical significance levels, morphological characteristics, and population-specific anatomical variants. This methodological framework provides systematic, evidence-based approaches for developing anatomical variants databases that institutions can adapt to their specific educational contexts and technological capabilities.
%C MISC
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info