3D printer shows surgeons secrets of strange hearts
3D printer shows surgeons secrets of strange hearts
This one is being held by Laura Olivieri, a paediatric cardiologist at the Children's National Medical Center in Washington DC, which spent $250,000 on the printer. She says that the replica hearts are ideal for dry runs of complex operations, allowing the surgeon to see beforehand the exact anatomical landscape they will have to navigate.
The heart is created by feeding the printer with two-dimensional data from individual patients' computerised tomography or ultrasound scans, allowing the machine to build up a replica layer by layer.
The hospital is in the early stages of plans to make real tissue with a 3D printer. Recently, researchers at Cornell University in New York printed an artificial ear and seeded it with cells from cows. Elsewhere, researchers recently made the world's first 3D-printed mini human livers.