Cancer patient receives world’s first 3-D printed ribs and sternum

Cancer patient receives world’s first 3-D printed ribs and sternum

Last updated: September 12, 2015

Melbourne, Australia (BBN)-A cancer patient has received a set of titanium 3-D printed ribs -- a world first -- Australian researchers announced Friday.
Designed by Melbourne-based Anatomics, the prosthesis was implanted into a 54-year-old Spanish cancer patient suffering from a chest wall sarcoma, reports the Discovery.com.
With a tumor growing around his rib cage, the patient needed his sternum and several ribs replaced.
"This part of the chest is notoriously tricky to recreate with prosthetics, due to the complex geometry and design required for each patient," Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) explains in a news release.
"The patient's surgical team at the Salamanca University Hospital thought a fully customised 3D printed implant could replicate the intricate structures of the sternum and ribs, providing a safer option for the patient."
Data from a high-resolution CT scan helped researchers build the sternum and ribs, which were printed using a $1.3 million Arcam printer.
CSIRO reports that, nearly two weeks after the procedure, the patient is recovering well.
BBN/SK/AD

Bangladesh Business News
BBN is the country's oldest Business News and Analysis platform, run by veteran business journalist and analyst that you can rely upon.
© Copyright 2024 - BBN - All Rights Reserved
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram