Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Surgeons now able to print out life-sized models

- CHELSEA GEACH chelsea.geach@inl.co.za

TYGERBERG Hospital and Stellenbos­ch University have opened their own medical three-dimensiona­l (3D) printing lab, allowing surgeons to print out life-sized models of the anatomy they are going to operate on.

Orthopaedi­c surgeon and anatomy lecturer Dr Rudolph Venter said 3D printing technology had been used in medicine for a long time already, but at such an exorbitant cost that it could only be used in the realm of funded research.

Now, instead of paying thousands of rand for an engineerin­g firm to produce a 3D model, doctors from Stellenbos­ch University and Tygerberg Hospital’s Division of Orthopaedi­c Surgery are able to print their own for just a couple hundred rand.

“Something that was out of reach for most patients is now done for people walking off the street into Tygerberg Hospital – 3D printers are now very affordable and the software is so easy to use. The orthopaedi­c surgeons are learning how to do it,” Venter said.

The 3D printers have been used for 10 big cases so far, seven of which were public health-care patients. In one case, Venter needed to cut a tumour out of surroundin­g bone, together with lead surgeon Professor Nando Ferreira. The patient had CT scans done and the imaging data was sent to the printer to be mapped into a 3D object. A life-size model of the anatomy was then printed out, with the bone printed in hard plastic and the tumour tissue in softer, rubbery plastic.

Just by feeling the model in his hand, Venter was able to familiaris­e himself with exactly which parts were tumour and needed to be excised.

The purpose of the model goes beyond lab preparatio­n, though. “We sterilise the model and take it to theatre with us,” Venter said.

During the operation, he could have one hand on the actual bone and tumour, and one hand on the 3D printed model to guide him.

“It’s like having this amazing, tactile road map of the patient’s anatomy inside their body.”

Beyond getting familiar with a particular patient’s anatomy, the 3D printing models also allow surgeons to rehearse procedures. One such patient needed a hip implant, but he had achondropl­asia – a bone growth disorder which causes dwarfism – so his bones were not the standard size.

“We weren’t sure whether the hip replacemen­t implants were going to fit, so we printed out his hip bone and practised it,” Venter said.

Together with surgeons Dr Koos Jordaan and Dr Gerard Pienaar, they cut the printed femur and put the implant in.

“We went to theatre feeling like we’d done this operation before. You know what to expect; your fingers have felt this before.”

A kilogram of the PLA plastic used to load up the printer costs about R400, and Venter said he could print about 20 femurs with that much plastic.

In another case last year, surgeons needed to correct a child’s spine deformity by removing a partially formed vertebra without damaging the complex structures surroundin­g it. Venter printed out a 3D model of the child’s spine for spinal surgeon

Dr Sanesh Miseer.

“He was so excited about this model, he took it home and dissembled it to deeply understand exactly what the patient’s anatomy is going to look like,” Venter said.

“He said it was like taking a CT scan out of the screen and holding it in your hand.”

Venter hopes the printers will benefit many different medical discipline­s.

“It’s going to open a lot of doors,” he said. “We’re very excited for the implicatio­ns of training medical students, and it’s awesome to have our patients benefit at grass roots level.”

In the future, the printers will be used to produce instrument­s that are tailor-made for patients.

Surgeons will also be able to design implants specific to each patient and send those designs off to be manufactur­ed by engineerin­g firms with the capability to 3D print metal objects using titanium powder.

 ?? STELLENBOS­CH UNIVERSITY ?? THIS is a 3D printed model of a patient’s hip joint. Surgeons used it to practise placing an implant into the joint, in order to make sure the implant was the exact correct size for the patient’s bones. |
STELLENBOS­CH UNIVERSITY THIS is a 3D printed model of a patient’s hip joint. Surgeons used it to practise placing an implant into the joint, in order to make sure the implant was the exact correct size for the patient’s bones. |
 ?? WILMA STASSEN ?? DR RUDOLPH Venter is a surgeon at Tygerberg Hospital’s Division of Orthopaedi­c Surgery and lecturer of clinical anatomy at Stellenbos­ch University. His team is using 3D printers to print out life-sized models of patients’ anatomy. |
WILMA STASSEN DR RUDOLPH Venter is a surgeon at Tygerberg Hospital’s Division of Orthopaedi­c Surgery and lecturer of clinical anatomy at Stellenbos­ch University. His team is using 3D printers to print out life-sized models of patients’ anatomy. |

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