Tuesday 26th January 2016- The Telegraph: Toddler gets world first adult kidney transplant using 3D printing

‘A three-year-old girl from Northern Ireland has become the first to have a life-saving adult kidney transplant, using 3D printing.

At four months old, Lucy Boucher suffered heart failure which starved her kidneys of oxygen. She was told she would need to have kidney dialysis for life, until surgeons at London’s Guy’s and St Thomas’ and Great Ormond Street Hospital performed the transplant.’

The surgery, which took place last November, has now been pronounced a success, with both father and daughter in recovery.’

‘According to Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust: “It is the first time in the world that 3D printing has been used to aid kidney transplant surgery involving an adult donor and a child recipient.”

Mr Boucher said: “My first reaction when I saw the 3D printout of my kidney was surprise at how big it was and I wondered how it could possibly fit into Lucy.

“Seeing the model of her abdomen and the way the kidney was going to be transplanted inside her gave me a clear understanding of exactly what was going to happen.”‘

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Toddler gets world first adult kidney transplant using 3D printing

Kidney transplant: Antrim parents’ gratitude after innovative surgery aided by 3D printing- BBC News

Tuesday 24th November 2015- BBC News: 3D printing helps surgeons plan life-saving operation

‘A 3D-printed model of the blood vessels inside a woman’s brain has helped surgeons practise life-saving surgery.

The surgeons needed to operate to correct a weakness, or aneurysm, in a blood vessel inside the patient’s head.

Scans of the aneurysm revealed that the usual approach surgeons would take to fix it would not have worked.

3D printing is increasingly finding a role in medicine to either help doctors prepare before carrying out procedures or to make prosthetics.’

‘After suffering vision problems and recurrent headaches, New York state resident Theresa Flint was diagnosed with an aneurysm that, if left untreated, would have proved fatal.

An aneurysm is a bulging blood vessel caused by a weakness in an artery wall that risks rupturing.

The usual way to treat such problems is to implant a metallic basket that strengthens the artery wall, said Dr Adnan Siddiqui, chief medical officer at the Jacobs Institute in Buffalo, New York, who directed the treatment.

However, scans of the weak blood vessel revealed that this approach would not work, Dr Siddiqui told the BBC.

“It was a serious problem from the standpoint that she had an extremely irregular brain aneurysm that would be tricky to treat with micro-surgery,” he said.

The scans showed that the blood vessels were severely twisted and, as a result, very difficult to reach.

“There are some commonalities between all human beings,” said Dr Siddiqui, “but at the end of the day our vascular tree is as different as our fingerprints.”‘

‘To help the surgeons work out the best approach, the scans taken of Ms Flint’s brain were turned into a 3D model with the help of 3D-printing specialist Stratasys.

It helped make a replica built of a polymer that mimics human tissue allowing the surgeons to plan their approach and practise the operation.

“While we were doing that mock procedure we realised that we had to change some of the tools we wanted to use, given her anatomy,” said Dr Siddiqui.

“The day of surgery came and we tried out exactly what we thought would work best,” he said, adding that Ms Flint had “done great” since the aneurysm was corrected.

Dr Siddiqui said 3D printing was increasingly being used to help plan procedures and make models of human anatomy that give surgeons a better idea of what they will encounter during an operation. Many hospitals have now established relationships with 3D printing firms to help surgical staff.

“It may not be needed for the majority of routine cases,” he said, “but here its help was immeasurable.”‘

See:

3D printing helps surgeons plan life-saving operation

Friday 18th September 2015- BBC News: 3D printed windpipe improves girl’s operation

‘A 3D-printed windpipe has been used to practise delicate surgery before an operation on a six-year-old girl at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital.

It meant doctors could pick the correct tools needed to wash her lungs.

And as a result, Katie Parke, from Northern Ireland, needed to spend less time under anaesthetic and being ventilated.

Doctors at the hospital say the technology could also be used to train other doctors.

Katie has pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, which means grainy deposits build up in the microscopic air sacs in her lungs making it hard to breathe.

Regularly washing the lungs with saltwater is the only way to remove the deposits.

During Katie’s operation one of her lungs needed to be ventilated while the other was cleaned.

Normally, surgeons waste time on the operating table trying multiple combinations of different-sized tubes in order to perform the delicate surgery.

The team at Great Ormond Street Hospital used a CT scan of Katie to print out a 3D rubber model of Katie’s trachea. They could then select the tools they needed ahead of the operation.’

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3D printed windpipe improves girl’s operation

Friday 31st October 2014- The Telegraph: 3D printed drugs could revolutionise prescriptions

‘Now the 3D printer could be about to revolutionise the field of prescription medicines, by custom-making them for individual patients by delivering exactly the correct dose, to the nearest microgram.

Scientists from the University of Central Lancashire are patenting a new system of printing drugs, which could save the NHS the millions of pounds spent on mass-producing medicines.

The filaments of the 3D printer, which usually produce polymers, have been adapted to produce pharmaceutical compounds.

Its inventors say that it will spell the end of the ‘one size fits all’ dose, which often leads patients taking too much or too little of a prescribed drug. Patients will even be able to print their own drugs’.

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3D printed drugs could revolutionise prescriptions

Monday 6th October 2014- The Independent: 3D printed heart saves baby’s life as medical technology leaps ahead

The 3D printed is by far my favourite piece of modern technology- particularly because of its factor in the advancement of the practise and quality of medicine; this article is one example.

‘Using MRI scan data, Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital in New York City 3D printed a copy of the [ 2 week old] child’s heart, which was both riddled with holes and structured unusually.

Surgery was going to be complicated and dangerous, but this 3D printed heart provided the surgeons the opportunity to study the organ, and develop a detailed surgery strategy’.

Before this technique, surgeons had to stop the heart and then plan a course of action, increasing the risk of death and complications in surgery.

See:

3D printed heart saves baby’s life as medical technology leaps ahead