Author/Authors :
Grillo, Felipe Wilker Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Souza, Victor Hugo Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Matsuda, Renan Hiroshi Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Rondinoni, Carlo Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Pavan, Theo Zeferino Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Baffa, Oswaldo Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Carneiro, Antonio Adilton Oliveira Department of Physics - Faculty of Philosophy - Science and Letters at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Monte Alegre - Ribeirão Preto , BraziL , Machado, Helio Rubens Department of Surgery and Anatomy - Faculty of Medicine at Ribeirao Preto - University of Sao Paulo - Ribeirão Preto, Brazil
Abstract :
Training in medical education depends on the availability of standardized materials that can reliably
mimic the human anatomy and physiology. One alternative to using cadavers or animal bodies is to employ
phantoms or mimicking devices. Styrene-ethylene/butylene-styrene (SEBS) gels are biologically inert and present
tunable properties, including mechanical properties that resemble the soft tissue. Therefore, SEBS is an alternative to
develop a patient-specific phantom, that provides real visual and morphological experience during simulation-
based neurosurgical training.
Results: A 3D model was reconstructed and printed based on patient-specific magnetic resonance images. The
fused deposition of polyactic acid (PLA) filament and selective laser sintering of polyamid were used for 3D
printing. Silicone and SEBS materials were employed to mimic soft tissues. A neuronavigation protocol was
performed on the 3D-printed models scaled to three different sizes, 100%, 50%, and 25% of the original
dimensions. A neurosurgery team (17 individuals) evaluated the phantom realism as “very good”and “perfect”in
49% and 31% of the cases, respectively, and rated phantom utility as “very good”and “perfect”in 61% and 32% of
the cases, respectively. Models in original size (100%) and scaled to 50% provided a quantitative and realistic visual
analysis of the patient’s cortical anatomy without distortion. However, reduction to one quarter of the original size
(25%) hindered visualization of surface details and identification of anatomical landmarks.
Conclusions: A patient-specific phantom was developed with anatomically and spatially accurate shapes, that can
be used as an alternative for surgical planning. Printed models scaled to sizes that avoided quality loss might save
time and reduce medical training costs.
Keywords :
Simulator , Neurosurgery , Education , Medical training , Patient-specific , Neuronavigation , Phantom 3D printing