The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.
Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI.
J Craniofac Surg. 2021 Oct 1;32(7):2465-2467. doi: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000007672.
Three-dimensional (3D) modeling and printing technologies are increasingly utilized as tools to assist in complex craniofacial reconstructions. Herein, the authors report the intraoperative use of sterilized 3D models printed in-house to mold a custom resorbable implant in the case of a pediatric patient with a unilateral complex orbital fracture. The imaging was processed with open-source software. Two patient-specific orbital models were 3D-printed (Fig. 2): a life-size print of the patient's preoperative CT scan and a left orbit reconstructed to resemble its uninjured state using mirrored-imaging of the uninjured side. This construct ultimately served as a sterilized template to mold a resorbable implant intraoperatively. Post-operatively, the patient experienced no complications. At the 18-month follow-up, the patient had done well without diplopia, headaches or visual problems. The authors report a case of a successful orbit reconstruction assisted by mirrored-image computer modeling and patient-specific 3D printing.
三维(3D)建模和打印技术越来越多地被用作辅助复杂颅面重建的工具。在此,作者报告了在一名患有单侧复杂眼眶骨折的儿科患者中,术中使用内部打印的消毒 3D 模型来成型定制可吸收植入物的情况。这些成像经过开源软件处理。两位患者特定的眼眶模型进行了 3D 打印(图 2):患者术前 CT 扫描的等大打印,以及使用未受伤侧镜像成像重建的类似未受伤状态的左侧眼眶。该结构最终用作术中成型可吸收植入物的消毒模板。术后,患者无并发症。在 18 个月的随访中,患者恢复良好,无复视、头痛或视觉问题。作者报告了一例成功的眼眶重建病例,该病例得到了镜像计算机建模和患者特定 3D 打印的辅助。