Times Colonist

3-D-printed hearts help train for delicate surgery

Model at Sick Kids draws cardiac surgeons from around the globe

- SHERYL UBELACKER

The pediatric surgeons hover over a tiny heart, gently retracting delicate inner structures and attaching a graft with impossibly intricate stitches to repair a congenital defect that would mean certain death within days of birth.

But this heart isn’t inside the chest cavity of a newborn; it’s a 3D-printed model being used at Sick Kids Hospital in Toronto to train cardiac surgeons from around the world in some of the most complex operations they will ever perform during their careers.

About a dozen trainees — from Canada and such countries as Norway, Oman, Mexico and the United States — have come to watch master surgeons demonstrat­e the highly complicate­d techniques used to repair a number of congenital heart abnormalit­ies and to safely practise those skills on models of their own.

Three-dimensiona­l copies have been created of five hearts from real infants with cardiac anomalies using a high-tech 3D-printer, which almost perfectly reproduces the organ’s structure using a photopolym­er resin, based on sophistica­ted MRI and CT imaging.

“Each of the models represents a very specific form of disease that is very different,” says Dr. Glen Van Arsdell, chief of cardiovasc­ular surgery at Sick Kids. “I can look at the model and tell you what the diagnosis is.”

The 3D-printed hearts — some orange, others whitish in colour — were produced by Dr. Shi-Joon Yoo, a cardiac radiologis­t at the hospital.

Depending on its size, a dupli- cate of a child’s heart can take anywhere from four to 12 hours to produce, as layer upon layer of the resin is built up, he says.

While the current cost is somewhat prohibitiv­e — estimated at about $2,000 per model — Yoo says the technology means hundreds of copies can be printed after imaging a single child’s heart to demonstrat­e a particular defect.

“Anybody can practise on the same structure, so that is the real value of that.”

Van Arsdell says the trainees have come to Toronto to learn procedures that would typically take years to learn by watching and assisting senior surgeons before they would be allowed to perform the operation on their own. For some, such expertise isn’t available in their home countries.

“So this is a way of doing that in a much more rapid fashion.”

Some of the operations would never have been done before by these surgeons, he says, adding that the teaching session provides mentoring in an environmen­t that doesn’t jeopardize patient health.

“Some of them will go into positions where they will be further mentored in the clinical setting. Some of them will be in developing countries where this is going to be their responsibi­lity, and they’re here to advance their skills and ability to provide for their patients.”

With such highly intricate surgery, “the consequenc­es are dire if you don’t get it exactly right; this is a way to practise it when the consequenc­es are not dire,” Arsdell says.

“And if it’s not quite right, we can advise the trainees or they can modify without having any problems for a real patient.”

Dr. Juan Roberto Contreras of Temuco, Chile, says he does cardiac surgery only in adults but wants to expand his practice to children in the coming years.

“I think this is a really good option, because initially when we are students, we didn’t have the opportunit­y for making this operation in my country,” he says, working on a model with the hallmarks of a particular­ly complex congenital abnormalit­y.

That sentiment is echoed by Dr. Ala Alwan, who has travelled to Toronto from Baghdad. “It’s a great opportunit­y to do these procedures on these models because we don’t have such models in our country, and we don’t do such procedures because they are very complicate­d.”

Alwan refers to Van Arsdell and other teachers at the session — among them, Dr. Thomas Spray of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia — as giants in the field of pediatric heart surgery.

Spray, who demonstrat­ed one of the most technicall­y challengin­g surgeries, says the beauty of 3Dprinted models is that they represent the heart of an actual patient, with anatomy that matches what doctors would confront in the operating room.

“Obviously, training somebody to do that in the operating room is going to be very difficult, because you have a patient’s life at stake,” says Spray, chief of cardiothor­acic surgery at the U.S. hospital.

“So being able to work on a true representa­tion of what we see clinically is very valuable for training people in how to put these things together without any problems. Then they can take that to the operating room.”

While the resin currently used is superior to earlier 3-D-printing materials, the models still don’t feel quite life-like and are weaker than real heart tissue, says Spray, who neverthele­ss calls them good for training.

 ??  ?? Dr. Thomas Spray, left, of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, trains with help from Dr. Camille Hancock Friesen, chief pediatric cardiac surgeon at IWK Halifax hospital, as he performs the Norwood Procedure on a 3-D model newborn heart at the...
Dr. Thomas Spray, left, of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, trains with help from Dr. Camille Hancock Friesen, chief pediatric cardiac surgeon at IWK Halifax hospital, as he performs the Norwood Procedure on a 3-D model newborn heart at the...

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