Wang Shu, Noh Yohan, Brown Jemma, Roujol Sébastien, Li Ye, Wang Shuangyi, Housden Richard, Ester Mar Casajuana, Al-Hamadani Maleha, Rajani Ronak, Rhode Kawal
School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, St Thomas' Hospital, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
British Heart Foundation Centre, St Thomas' Hospital, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
3D Print Addit Manuf. 2020 Dec 1;7(6):269-278. doi: 10.1089/3dp.2019.0097. Epub 2020 Dec 16.
Organ phantoms are widely used for evaluating medical technologies, training clinical practitioners, as well as surgical planning. In the context of cardiovascular disease, a patient-specific cardiac phantom can play an important role for interventional cardiology procedures. However, phantoms with complicated structures are difficult to fabricate by conventional manufacturing methods. The emergence of three-dimensional (3D) printing with soft materials provides the opportunity to produce phantoms with complex geometries and realistic properties. In this work, the aim was to explore the use of a direct 3D printing technique to produce multimodal imaging cardiac phantoms and to test the physical properties of the new materials used, namely the Poro-Lay series and TangoPlus. The cardiac phantoms were first modeled using real data segmented from a patient chest computer tomography (CT) scan and then printed with the novel materials. They were then tested quantitatively in terms of stiffness and ultrasound (US) acoustic values and qualitatively with US, CT, and magnetic resonance imaging systems. From the stiffness measurements, Lay-fomm 40 had the closest Young's modulus to real myocardium with an error of 29-54%, while TangoPlus had the largest difference. From the US acoustics measurements, Lay-fomm 40 also demonstrated the closest soft tissue-mimicking properties with both the smallest attenuation and impedance differences. Furthermore, the imaging results show that the phantoms are compatible with multiple imaging modalities and thus have potential to be used for interventional procedure simulation and testing of novel interventional devices. In conclusion, direct 3D printing with Poro-Lay and TangoPlus is a promising method for manufacture of multimodal imaging phantoms with complicated structures, especially for soft patient-specific phantoms.
器官模型被广泛用于评估医疗技术、培训临床医生以及手术规划。在心血管疾病领域,针对特定患者的心脏模型在介入心脏病学手术中可发挥重要作用。然而,具有复杂结构的模型难以通过传统制造方法制造。使用软材料的三维(3D)打印技术的出现为生产具有复杂几何形状和逼真特性的模型提供了机会。在这项工作中,目的是探索使用直接3D打印技术来生产多模态成像心脏模型,并测试所使用的新材料(即Poro-Lay系列和TangoPlus)的物理特性。心脏模型首先使用从患者胸部计算机断层扫描(CT)扫描中分割出的真实数据进行建模,然后用这些新型材料进行打印。然后,对它们的硬度和超声(US)声学值进行定量测试,并使用超声、CT和磁共振成像系统进行定性测试。从硬度测量结果来看,Lay-fomm 40的杨氏模量与真实心肌最接近,误差为29 - 54%,而TangoPlus的差异最大。从超声声学测量结果来看,Lay-fomm 40也表现出最接近软组织模拟特性,其衰减和阻抗差异最小。此外,成像结果表明这些模型与多种成像模态兼容,因此有潜力用于介入手术模拟和新型介入设备的测试。总之,使用Poro-Lay和TangoPlus进行直接3D打印是制造具有复杂结构的多模态成像模型的一种有前途的方法,特别是对于针对特定患者的软模型。