针对颅骨切除术后缺陷的患者特异性3d打印头盔-一例报告。

IF 3.2 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING 3D printing in medicine Pub Date : 2022-01-28 DOI:10.1186/s41205-022-00131-1
Sherby Suet-Ying Pang, Evan Fang, Kam Wai Chen, Matthew Leung, Velda Ling-Yu Chow, Christian Fang
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:接受减压性颅骨切除术(DC)的患者通常会佩戴头盔,以保护颅骨切除术部位在康复过程中免受损伤。然而,传统的“一刀切”头盔可能不适合某些颅骨切除术缺陷。我们描述了一个定制的3d打印头盔的生产和使用的DC患者,传统的头盔是不可行的,由于颅骨切除术的缺陷配置。病例介绍:65岁男性筛窦鼻癌患者行颅鼻切除术及DC联合游离股外侧皮瓣重建术治疗脑脊液漏。他需要一个外部头盔来保护颅骨切除部位,然而,传统头盔的边缘压迫颅骨切除部位,绑带压迫肌瓣的血管蒂。将患者颅骨的计算机地形(CT)扫描导入3D建模软件,并使用熔融沉积建模(FDM)制造患者特定的无肩带头盔。最终的头盔完全适合患者,避免了压迫问题,同时也提供了比传统头盔更好的美容效果。术后4个月,头盔完好无损,仍在使用中。结论:3D打印可用于生产小批量、患者特异性的康复外部设备,标准化辅助设备不是最佳选择。一旦克服了最初的启动成本和培训,这些设备就可以由外科医生自己生产,以满足广泛的临床需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Patient-specific 3D-printed helmet for post-craniectomy defect - a case report.

Background: Patients who undergo decompressive craniectomy (DC) are often fitted with a helmet that protects the craniectomy site from injury during rehabilitation. However, conventional "one-size-fits-all" helmets may not be feasible for certain craniectomy defects. We describe the production and use of a custom 3D-printed helmet for a DC patient where a conventional helmet was not feasible due to the craniectomy defect configuration.

Case presentation: A 65-year-old male with ethmoid sinonasal carcinoma underwent cranionasal resection and DC with free vastus lateralis flap reconstruction to treat cerebrospinal fluid leakage. He required an external helmet to protect the craniectomy site, however, the rim of a conventional helmet compressed the craniectomy site, and the straps compressed the vascular pedicle of the muscle flap. Computed topography (CT) scans of the patient's cranium were imported into 3D modelling software and used to fabricate a patient-specific, strapless helmet using fused deposition modelling (FDM). The final helmet fit the patient perfectly and circumvented the compression issues, while also providing better cosmesis than the conventional helmet. Four months postoperatively, the helmet remains intact and in use.

Conclusions: 3D printing can be used to produce low-volume, patient-specific external devices for rehabilitation where standardized adjuncts are not optimal. Once initial start-up costs and training are overcome, these devices can be produced by surgeons themselves to meet a wide range of clinical needs.

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