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3D-printed saw guides for lower arm osteotomy, a comparison between a synthetic CT and CT-based workflow

Authors :
Willemsen, Koen
Ketel, Mirte H.M.
Zijlstra, Frank
Florkow, Mateusz C.
Kuiper, Ruurd J.A.
van der Wal, Bart C.H.
Weinans, Harrie
Pouran, Behdad
Beekman, Freek J.
Seevinck, Peter R.
Sakkers, Ralph J.B.
Willemsen, Koen
Ketel, Mirte H.M.
Zijlstra, Frank
Florkow, Mateusz C.
Kuiper, Ruurd J.A.
van der Wal, Bart C.H.
Weinans, Harrie
Pouran, Behdad
Beekman, Freek J.
Seevinck, Peter R.
Sakkers, Ralph J.B.
Source :
3D Printing in Medicine vol.7 (2021) date: 2021-04-29 nr.1 [ISSN 2365-6271]
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Three-dimensional (3D)-printed saw guides are frequently used to optimize osteotomy results and are usually designed based on computed tomography (CT), despite the radiation burden, as radiation-less alternatives like magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have inferior bone visualization capabilities. This study investigated the usability of MR-based synthetic-CT (sCT), a novel radiation-less bone visualization technique for 3D planning and design of patient-specific saw guides.METHODS: Eight human cadaveric lower arms (mean age: 78y) received MRI and CT scans as well as high-resolution micro-CT. From the MRI scans, sCT were generated using a conditional generative adversarial network. Digital 3D bone surface models based on the sCT and general CT were compared to the surface model from the micro-CT that was used as ground truth for image resolution. From both the sCT and CT digital bone models saw guides were designed and 3D-printed in nylon for one proximal and one distal bone position for each radius and ulna. Six blinded observers placed these saw guides as accurately as possible on dissected bones. The position of each guide was assessed by optical 3D-scanning of each bone with positioned saw guide and compared to the preplanning. Eight placement errors were evaluated: three translational errors (along each axis), three rotational errors (around each axis), a total translation (∆T) and a total rotation error (∆R).RESULTS: Surface models derived from micro-CT were on average smaller than sCT and CT-based models with average differences of 0.27 ± 0.30 mm for sCT and 0.24 ± 0.12 mm for CT. No statistically significant positioning differences on the bones were found between sCT- and CT-based saw guides for any axis specific translational or rotational errors nor between the ∆T (p = .284) and ∆R (p = .216). On Bland-Altman plots, the ∆T and ∆R limits of agreement (LoA) were within the inter-observer variability LoA.CONCLUSIONS: This re

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
3D Printing in Medicine vol.7 (2021) date: 2021-04-29 nr.1 [ISSN 2365-6271]
Notes :
Willemsen, Koen
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1359189693
Document Type :
Electronic Resource