%0 Journal Article %T Finite element model of female thermoregulation with geometry based on medical images. %A Castellani MP %A Rioux TP %A Castellani JW %A Potter AW %A Notley SR %A Xu X %J J Therm Biol %V 113 %N 0 %D Apr 2023 %M 37055108 %F 3.189 %R 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2023.103477 %X BACKGROUND: this study describes the development of a female finite element thermoregulatory model (FETM) METHOD: the female body model was developed from medical image datasets of a median U.S. female and was constructed to be anatomically correct. The body model preserves the geometric shapes of 13 organs and tissues, including skin, muscles, fat, bones, heart, lungs, brain, bladder, intestines, stomach, kidneys, liver, and eyes. Heat balance within the body is described by the bio-heat transfer equation. Heat exchange at the skin surface includes conduction, convection, radiation, and sweat evaporation. Vasodilation, vasoconstriction, sweating, and shivering are controlled by afferent and efferent signals to and from the skin and hypothalamus.
RESULTS: the model was validated with measured physiological data during exercise and rest in thermoneutral, hot, and cold conditions. Validations show the model predicted the core temperature (rectal and tympanic temperatures) and mean skin temperatures with acceptable accuracy (within 0.5 °C and 1.6 °C, respectively) CONCLUSION: this female FETM predicted high spatial resolution temperature distribution across the female body, which provides quantitative insights into human thermoregulatory responses in females to non-uniform and transient environmental exposure.