Title of article :
Intracranial vasculature 3D printing: review of techniques and manufacturing processes to inform clinical practice
Author/Authors :
Cogswell, Petrice M. Department of Radiology - Mayo Clinic - Rochester - MN , USA , Alexander, Amy E. Department of Radiology - Mayo Clinic - Rochester - MN , USA , Dickens, Hunter J. Department of Radiology - Mayo Clinic - Rochester - MN , USA , Morris, Jonathan M. Department of Radiology - Mayo Clinic - Rochester - MN , USA , Rischall, Matthew A. Suburban Imaging - Bloomington - MN , USA , Lanzino, Giuseppe Department of Neurosurgery - Mayo Clinic - Rochester - MN , USA
Abstract :
In recent years, three-dimensional (3D) printing has been increasingly applied to the intracranial
vasculature for patient-specific surgical planning, training, education, and research. Unfortunately, though, much of
the prior literature regarding 3D printing has focused on the end-product and not the process. In addition, for 3D
printing/manufacturing to occur on a large scale, challenges and bottlenecks specific to each modeled anatomy
must be overcome.
Main body: In this review article, limitations and considerations of each 3D printing processing step, as they relate
to printing individual intracranial vasculature models and providing an active clinical service for a quaternary care
center, are discussed. Relevant advantages and disadvantages of the available acquisition techniques (computed
tomography, magnetic resonance, and digital subtraction angiography) are reviewed. Specific steps in
segmentation, processing, and creation of a printable file may impede the workflow or degrade the fidelity of the
printed model and are, therefore, given added attention. The various available printing techniques are compared
with respect to printing the intracranial vasculature. Finally, applications are discussed, and a variety of example
models are shown.
Conclusion: In this review we provide insight into the manufacturing of 3D models of the intracranial vasculature
that may facilitate incorporation into or improve utility of 3D vascular models in clinical practice.
Keywords :
Patient specific models , 3D printing , Intracranial vasculature , Cerebral angiography
Journal title :
3D Printing in Medicine