Medicine Meets Virtual Reality 15 in vivo, in vitro, in silico: Designing the Next in Medicine
Many different reasons, such as disease, accident, crime, and war, may cause large cranial defects. A technique for cranial implant design using patient CT data has been developed by Dujovny and Evenhouse et al., which builds patient-specific implants.[1] This method generates a computer polygona...
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Hoofdauteur: | |
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Formaat: | Boek |
Taal: | English |
Gepubliceerd in: |
IOS Press
2013
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Onderwerpen: | |
Online toegang: | https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/35111 |
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Thư viện lưu trữ: | Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt |
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Samenvatting: | Many different reasons, such as disease, accident, crime, and war, may cause large
cranial defects. A technique for cranial implant design using patient CT data has
been developed by Dujovny and Evenhouse et al., which builds patient-specific
implants.[1] This method generates a computer polygonal model of the skull and
defect from the patient’s CT data, and a physical model of the skull with defect
is built after the model is exported to a stereolithography machine. Using this
model as a template, the implant is designed and fabricated using wax to sculpt
the missing tissue. A mold is made to cast the implant. Although this method
results in patient specific implants with near perfect fit, it is expansive and timeconsuming. |
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