Surgical reconstruction of the ossicular chain with custom 3D printed ossicular prosthesis

Journal Title: 3D Printing in Medicine - Year 2017, Vol 3, Issue

Abstract

Presented in the main paper.

Authors and Affiliations

Jeffrey D. Hirsch, Richard L. Vincent, David J. Eisenman

Keywords

Related Articles

Identifying a commercially-available 3D printing process that minimizes model distortion after annealing and autoclaving and the effect of steam sterilization on mechanical strength

Fused deposition modeling 3D printing is used in medicine for diverse purposes such as creating patient-specific anatomical models and surgical instruments. For use in the sterile surgical field, it is necessary to under...

Maintaining safety and efficacy for 3D printing in medicine

The increased and accelerating utilization of 3D printing in medicine opens up questions regarding safety and efficacy in the use of medical models. The authors recognize an important shift towards point-of-care manufact...

Assessment of body-powered 3D printed partial finger prostheses: a case study

All data analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

3D printing in medicine of congenital heart diseases

Congenital heart diseases causing significant hemodynamic and functional consequences require surgical repair. Understanding of the precise surgical anatomy is often challenging and can be inadequate or wrong. Modern hig...

Additively manufactured medical products – the FDA perspective

Additive manufacturing/3D printing of medical devices is becoming more commonplace, a 3D printed drug is now commercially available, and bioprinting is poised to transition from laboratory to market. Despite the variety...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP680677
  • DOI  10.1186/s41205-017-0015-2
  • Views 49
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Jeffrey D. Hirsch, Richard L. Vincent, David J. Eisenman (2017). Surgical reconstruction of the ossicular chain with custom 3D printed ossicular prosthesis. 3D Printing in Medicine, 3(), -. https://www.europub.co.uk/articles/-A-680677