Vol 75, No 5 (2017)
Original articles
Published online: 2017-03-03

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Utilisation of three-dimensional printed heart models for operative planning of complex congenital heart defects

Peter Olejník, Matej Nosal, Tomas Havran, Adriana Furdova, Maros Cizmar, Michal Slabej, Andrej Thurzo, Pavol Vitovic, Martin Klvac, Tibor Acel, Jozef Masura
Kardiol Pol 2017;75(5):495-501.

Abstract

Background and aim: To evaluate the accuracy of the three-dimensional (3D) printing of cardiovascular structures. To explore whether utilisation of 3D printed heart replicas can improve surgical and catheter interventional planning in patients with complex congenital heart defects.

Methods: Between December 2014 and November 2015 we fabricated eight cardiovascular models based on computed tomography data in patients with complex spatial anatomical relationships of cardiovascular structures. A Bland-Altman analysis was used to assess the accuracy of 3D printing by comparing dimension measurements at analogous anatomical locations between the printed models and digital imagery data, as well as between printed models and in vivo surgical findings. The contribution of 3D printed heart models for perioperative planning improvement was evaluated in the four most representative patients.

Results: Bland-Altman analysis confirmed the high accuracy of 3D cardiovascular printing. Each printed model offered an improved spatial anatomical orientation of cardiovascular structures.

Conclusions: Current 3D printers can produce authentic copies of patients` cardiovascular systems from computed tomography data. The use of 3D printed models can facilitate surgical or catheter interventional procedures in patients with complex congenital heart defects due to better preoperative planning and intraoperative orientation.