| Literature DB >> 27830490 |
Fabian Adams1,2, Tian Qiu3,4, Andrew Mark3, Benjamin Fritz5, Lena Kramer6, Daniel Schlager7, Ulrich Wetterauer7, Arkadiusz Miernik7, Peer Fischer3,4.
Abstract
Organ models are used for planning and simulation of operations, developing new surgical instruments, and training purposes. There is a substantial demand for in vitro organ phantoms, especially in urological surgery. Animal models and existing simulator systems poorly mimic the detailed morphology and the physical properties of human organs. In this paper, we report a novel fabrication process to make a human kidney phantom with realistic anatomical structures and physical properties. The detailed anatomical structure was directly acquired from high resolution CT data sets of human cadaveric kidneys. The soft phantoms were constructed using a novel technique that combines 3D wax printing and polymer molding. Anatomical details and material properties of the phantoms were validated in detail by CT scan, ultrasound, and endoscopy. CT reconstruction, ultrasound examination, and endoscopy showed that the designed phantom mimics a real kidney's detailed anatomy and correctly corresponds to the targeted human cadaver's upper urinary tract. Soft materials with a tensile modulus of 0.8-1.5 MPa as well as biocompatible hydrogels were used to mimic human kidney tissues. We developed a method of constructing 3D organ models from medical imaging data using a 3D wax printing and molding process. This method is cost-effective means for obtaining a reproducible and robust model suitable for surgical simulation and training purposes.Entities:
Keywords: 3D printing; Endoscope training; Kidney model; Op-simulation; Organ phantom
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27830490 PMCID: PMC5362658 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-016-1757-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934
Figure 1Workflow for the design of the model. (a) CT imaging data of a human kidney was acquired. (b) CT images were constructed to the 3D model. (c) The collecting system is used as the inner mold. (d) The outer shape of the kidney is used to design two separated negative molds.
Figure 2Workflow for building a 3D kidney phantom. (a) The inner mold is 3D printed in wax. (b) The outer mold is 3D printed in photopolymer. (c) The wax mold is inserted, and the upper and lower outer molds are assembled and sealed. (d) Liquid polymer is poured into the mold and degassed. (e) The phantom is demolded from the outer mold, and the inner mold is dissolved in ethanol. (f) The obtained kidney phantom.
Figure 3Images of the kidney phantoms made of different materials (front and back side): (a) silicone elastomer, (b) Agarose gel, (c) PDMS.
Figure 4Evaluation of the accuracy of the phantom. (a) The phantom (silicone elastomer) in a CT scanner. (b) Qualitative comparison of the two 3D-reconstructions. The phantom in Ecoflex material replicates the structure of the real organ with detailed features. Kidney tissue is shown in red, and the collecting system is shown in green. (c) Quantitative error analysis of the collecting system in the phantom when compared to the original CT scan. The surface color of the phantom model represents the distance error, compared to the real organ as a reference. Note the distribution of the error is shown on the right side of the color bar, with the maximum error of 2 mm and a mean error of around 0.6 mm.
Figure 5Ultrasound images of the three models made of different materials in comparison to a real human kidney. The agarose model outperforms the other types of materials in terms of replicating the outer shape and tissue of the kidney, especially the appearance of the collection system, when compared to the real organ.
Figure 6Endoscopic validation. The view of upper calyces in a real human kidney (a) and in the silicone elastomer phantom (b).
We compared the material properties of the three polymers used to replicate kidney tissue in this study, as well as, TangoPlus®/TangoBlackPlus® (directly 3D printable elastomers).
| Materials | Kidney tissue | Silicone elastomer | Agarose (4%) | PDMS | TangoPlus®/TangoBlackPlus® |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shore hardness | – | 20 (type 00) | 60–70 (type 00) | 44–54 (type A) | 26–28 (type A) |
| Elastic modulus (kPa) | 49 | 60 | 49 | 1320–2970 | 965–1051 |
| Tensile strength (MPa) | 4–9 | 1.1 | 0.3–0.5 | 3.51–7.65 | 0.8–1.5 |