Abstract

Medical 3D printing holds the potential of transforming personalized medicine by enabling the fabrication of patient-specific implants, reimagining prostheses, developing surgical guides to expedite and transform surgical interventions, and enabling a growing multitude of specialized applications. In order to realize this tremendous potential in frontline medicine, an understanding of the basic principles of 3D printing by the medical professionals is required. This primer underlines the basic approaches and tools in 3D printing, starting from patient anatomy acquired through cross-sectional imaging, in this case Computed Tomography (CT). We describe the basic principles using the relatively simple task of separation of the relevant anatomy to guide aneurysm repair. This is followed by exploration of more advanced techniques in the creation of patient-specific surgical guides and prostheses for a patient with extensive pleomorphic sarcoma using Computer Aided Design (CAD) software.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s41205-016-0008-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Medical Three dimensional (3D) printing holds the potential of transforming personalized medicine by enabling the fabrication of patient-specific implants, reimagining prostheses, developing surgical guides to expedite and transform surgical interventions, and enabling a growing multitude of specialized applications

  • The acquisition of images for the purposes of 3D printing requires minimizing the size of voxels within the reconstructed images while optimizing contrast administration for adequate visualization of the relevant anatomy

  • The collection of voxels occupying a specific set of Cartesian coordinates within a region of interest (ROI) needs to be transformed into a 3D object in a process referred to as tessellation

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Summary

Open Access

Medical 3D printing for vascular interventions and surgical oncology: a primer for the 2016 radiological society of North America (RSNA) hands-on course in 3D printing. Leonid Chepelev1* , Taryn Hodgdon, Ashish Gupta, Aili Wang, Carlos Torres, Satheesh Krishna, Ekin Akyuz, Dimitrios Mitsouras and Adnan Sheikh

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