Thanks to surgeon Mark Frame, 3D printers can now read CT scans and produce bone models at a fraction of the previous cost. To accomplish this he used OsiriX, an image processing package specific for the kinds produced by imaging equipment, such as CT scanners. As OsiriX is open source software that runs on mac OS, Frame was able to use it free of charge. He then used a program called MeshLab – also open source, and free, for Mac – to clean up the image and make them medical quality. Finally, this image was sent for printing. Seven days later the model bone arrived in the mail. All for £77.<p>Frame and colleagues have started a company that makes the models for you. Just send 3D-OM your CT scan and they’ll send you back your model. Heck, it’s so cheap now, if you’ve got a CT scan you might just want to get the model for fun.
I recently did Invisalign, and when I got my set of aligner trays I noticed that they clearly had been produced on a 3D printer (you could see the layers made as the laser scanned across the piece).<p>On looking into it, I learned that the impressions my dentist took are sent off to be CT scanned and then put through Invisalign's software to generate models to be 3D printed for every iteration of the treatment. This just seemed pretty awesome to me that this was possible.
At first glance I thought this was going to tell me they can now replace bones that are identical to the ones in your body. This is still completely awesome nonetheless - the doctor could literally show you what they intend to do and the practice for surgeons this could offer I imagine would be priceless.
honestly, this seems like a no-brainer. i'm not sure what took so long to get this done. both 3d scanners and 3d printers have been around for decades. the fact that it was mere matter of procuring the scanned data in a standard, open-source interoperable format is a big fail.