The Borneo Post

Low-cost prosthesis gives Brazil cancer survivor a new face

- Johannes Myburgh

SAO PAULO: Denise Vicentin looks in the mirror and bursts into tears.

A er losing her right eye and part of her jaw to cancer, the Brazilian woman is ge ing a new face thanks to a digitally engineered prosthesis.

“Today I can say how much be er I will feel being out in the streets. I have no words,” Vicentin, 53, tells AFP at a clinic in Sao Paulo a er being fi ed with a prosthesis for a missing chunk of her face.

Researcher­s at Paulista University are employing smartphone­s and 3D printing to create digital facial impression­s used to make silicone prostheses.

The pioneering method has slashed costs and halved production times.

“In the past, it took much longer work, hours of sculpting by hand, and the process was very invasive, with material on the patient’s face to get an imprint of their appearance,” says Rodrigo Salazar, the lead researcher.

“Today with cell phone pictures, we create a threedimen­sional model.”

Vicentin is one of more than 50 patients treated by Salazar and his colleagues since 2015.

The team specialize­s in maxillofac­ial prosthetic­s, a branch of dentistry focused on treating people disfigured by birth defects, disease or trauma.

Their technique was published in 2016 in the peer-reviewed Journal of Otolaryngo­logy - Head & Neck Surgery.

Enduring the stares

AFP has followed Vicentin’s journey for more than a year and a half, documentin­g the various stages of her physical and psychologi­cal recovery.

Her ordeal began 30 years ago when she developed a facial tumour. It was removed twice, but it returned in a malignant form two decades later.

Gradually, she lost parts of the right side of her face — along with her marriage and her dignity.

“When I was on the metro or train, I tried not to pay a ention to the stares,” Vicentin recalls.

“At places like the bowling alley, I felt them looking, and the person would even leave when they saw me.”

Vicentin has difficulty eating and her speech slurs because of the loss of her jaw. Her daughter, Jessica, acts as her interprete­r.

As 3D printing developed in recent years, Luciano Dib — one of Salazar’s supervisor­s and a co-researcher — got the idea to use the technique for prosthesis models.

“I saw people at the mall do 3D printing, so I thought, ‘Why can’t we use that for prostheses?’” he says.

Budget tech

Vicentin’s transforma­tion began in 2018.

Dib implanted titanium rods in her eye socket to hold the prosthesis.

Over the next year, she underwent multiple surgeries to build up her facial tissue.

Using a smartphone, Salazar took 15 pictures of her face from different angles, which were used to make a three-dimensiona­l digital model.

Using that model, a graphic designer created a mirror image of the healthy half of Vicentin’s face.

Technician­s then 3D-printed a prototype prosthesis which they used to make the final one from silicone, resin and synthetic fibers.

To make the prosthesis as reallookin­g as possible, Salazar and his colleagues carefully matched its coloring to Vicentin’s skin and blue-green eye. The process for making the final prosthesis took 12 hours — half the time of convention­al methods.

But it was spread out over a year because of Vicentin’s surgeries.

She received the completed prosthesis in early December.

The small egg-sized piece fit perfectly, with magnets clipping it to the titanium implants.

Convention­al techniques for making prosthesis models involve equipment costing up to US$500,000, he says. Their method requires a computer and a smartphone.

“The method demonstrat­es that you don’t need big investment­s to use advanced technology,” Salazar says. ‘So happy’

Next year, Dib and Salazar plan to open a treatment centre for facial prosthetic rehabilita­tion built by Paulista University and a non-profit organisati­on which they founded, called Plus Identity.

They have a waiting list of potential patients.

Eventually, Dib hopes 3D printing can be used to make the actual silicone prostheses.

“In a very short time, we will be able to assist the patient on the spot with a printed prosthesis,” Dib says.

For Vicentin, the journey is not yet over. She needs further treatment to restore her jaw and top lip.But for now, she is overjoyed.

“It was a long time looking at a face which was missing a piece, so I am so happy,” she tells AFP a er spending her first night at home with the prosthesis.

“I only took it off to clean it — I even slept with it.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Vicentin, who lost her right eye and part of her jaw to cancer, poses a er receiving a digitally-engineered prosthesis.
— AFP photos Vicentin, who lost her right eye and part of her jaw to cancer, poses a er receiving a digitally-engineered prosthesis.
 ??  ?? Doctor Rodrigo Salazar-Gamarra works on a digitally-engineered prosthesis for Vicentin.
Doctor Rodrigo Salazar-Gamarra works on a digitally-engineered prosthesis for Vicentin.

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