The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Doctors using 3-D models to practice surgery

Preparing for delicate procedures

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FARMINGTON — Doctors at the University of Connecticu­t are using 3-D printing technology to help them practice some delicate brain surgery.

Since 2012, physicians have been using a procedure to treat strokes called a mechanical thrombecto­my, guiding a catheter through a patient’s arteries and vessels into the brain to remove blood clots.

Medical physicist David Brotmann came up with the idea of creating an exact model of those blood vessels by converting medical scans into an image that could recognized by a 3-D printer.

Doctors learning the procedure could then practice on the plastic model, threading a wire through it and up to a piece of cotton or other substance that simulates a clot. The more they practice, the less likely something will go wrong during the actual surgery.

“The way previously to practice this technique was on a living patient,” said Brotman. “I don’t think you want that to be you or me.”

Brotman brought his idea to Dr. Clifford Yang, a cardiac radiologis­t at UConn Health with an electrical engineerin­g background, who in turn showed it to Dr. Charan Singh, an interventi­onal radiologis­t who teaches the thombectom­y procedure at UConn.

Together they figured out how to translate the medical scans into printable images.

“The scans, either CT or MRI, give you a bunch of slabs, layer by layer of what the vessels look like,” said Dr. Yang. “We are able to transfer that to files the 3-D printer can recognize and take those slabs and print layer by layer over several hours.”

Dr. Singh said using the model is a much more costeffect­ive way to teach the procedure to residents than using a two-dimensiona­l computer simulation and much safer than doing it for the first time on an actual patient. The printed model costs about $14, he said.

UConn currently has one set of images it uses to create models, which come from an anonymous patient. Eventually, the doctors say they will be able to convert medical scans almost immediatel­y, allowing neurosurge­ons and others to practice on a model of any patient’s unique vascular structure before going into surgery.

“Everybody’s anatomy is different,” said Dr. Singh. “So, in a tough case, it might be easier or better to practice outside the body, even one time, before going into a more serious situation.”

UConn is making its first-of-its-kind 3-D image files available to any hospital that wants to create their own models.

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