Lal Hitesh, Patralekh Mohit Kumar
Central Institute of Orthopaedics, Safdarjung Hospital and VMMC, New Delhi, 110029, India.
J Clin Orthop Trauma. 2018 Jul-Sep;9(3):260-268. doi: 10.1016/j.jcot.2018.07.022. Epub 2018 Aug 3.
With rapid emergence of 3D printing technology, surgeons have recently started to apply this for nearly all areas of orthopaedic trauma surgery. Computed tomography or magnetic resonance images of trauma patients can be utilized for making graspable objects from 3D reconstructed images. Patient specific anatomical models can thereby be created. They enhance surgeon's knowledge of their patients' precise patho-anatomy, regarding both traumatized bones and soft tissue as well as normal areas, and therefore help in accurate preoperative planning. 3D printed patient specific instrumentation can help to achieve precise implant placement, and better surgical results. Most importantly, customized implants, casts, orthoses and prosthetics can be manufactured to match an individual's anatomy. Three dimensional (3D) printing, also called as 'additive manufacturing' and 'rapid prototyping' is considered as the "second industrial revolution", and this appears to be especially true for orthopaedic trauma surgery.
A literature search was performed for extracting all papers related to 3D Printing applications in orthopaedics and allied sciences on the Pubmed, and SCOPUS; using suitable key terms and Boolean operators ("3D Printing" OR "3 dimensional printing" OR "3D printed" OR "additive manufacturing" OR "rapid prototyping") AND (''Orthopaedics" OR "Orthopaedics'') AND ("Trauma" OR "Injury")in June 2018. Search was also performed in Web of Science, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. No limits were set on the time period or evidence level, as 3D printing in orthopaedics is relatively recent and mainly low level evidence is available. Titles and abstracts were screened and all duplicate and unrelated papers were excluded. Papers related to orthopaedic trauma were manually selected for this review.
The search on Pubmed retrieved 144 Papers and similar search on SCOPUS retrieved 94 papers. Additional searches did not reveal more relevant papers. After excluding duplicates and unrelated papers, and on screening of titles and abstracts, 59 papers were considered for review. Papers related to spine fractures only were not included, as they have been covered in another paper in this journal issue.
All over the world, orthopaedic Surgeon's and allied professionals and scientists are enthusiastically using 3D printing technology for designing patient specific models, instrumentation, implants, orthosis and prosthesis, besides 3D bioprinting of bone and cartilage scaffolding, and the same has been applied for nearly all areas of orthopaedic trauma surgery, from head to foot.
随着3D打印技术的迅速兴起,外科医生最近已开始将其应用于骨科创伤手术的几乎所有领域。创伤患者的计算机断层扫描或磁共振图像可用于从3D重建图像制作可抓握的物体。从而可以创建患者特定的解剖模型。它们增强了外科医生对患者精确病理解剖结构的了解,包括受伤的骨骼、软组织以及正常区域,因此有助于进行准确的术前规划。3D打印的患者特定器械有助于实现精确的植入物放置,并获得更好的手术效果。最重要的是,可以制造定制的植入物、石膏、矫形器和假肢以匹配个体的解剖结构。三维(3D)打印,也称为“增材制造”和“快速成型”,被视为“第二次工业革命”,这在骨科创伤手术中似乎尤其如此。
2018年6月,在PubMed和SCOPUS上进行文献检索,以提取所有与3D打印在骨科及相关科学中的应用相关的论文;使用合适的关键词和布尔运算符(“3D打印”或“三维打印”或“3D打印的”或“增材制造”或“快速成型”)与(“骨科”或“骨科学”)与(“创伤”或“损伤”)。还在Web of Science、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库和Cochrane系统评价数据库中进行了检索。由于骨科中的3D打印相对较新且主要是低水平证据,因此未对时间段或证据水平设置限制。对标题和摘要进行筛选,排除所有重复和不相关的论文。手动选择与骨科创伤相关的论文进行本综述。
在PubMed上的检索检索到144篇论文,在SCOPUS上的类似检索检索到94篇论文。额外的检索未发现更多相关论文。在排除重复和不相关的论文,并筛选标题和摘要后,59篇论文被纳入综述。仅与脊柱骨折相关的论文未被纳入,因为本期刊的另一篇论文已涵盖这些内容。
在世界各地,骨科外科医生、相关专业人员和科学家都在热情地使用3D打印技术来设计患者特定的模型、器械、植入物、矫形器和假肢,此外还用于骨和软骨支架的3D生物打印,并且该技术已应用于从头部到脚部的几乎所有骨科创伤手术领域。