Body & Mind

World's first 3D-printed lower jaw implant gives 83-year old patient her bite back

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An 83-year old woman is the first in the world to receive a full 3D-printed titanium lower jaw implant
Slide showing the lower mandible implant in place
The patient-specific implant is a little heavier than its bone equivalent
Prof. dr. Jules Poukens, Prof. dr. Ivo Lambrichts, and Dr. Ingeborg van Kroonenburgh from the Functional Morphology research group of the University of Hasselt's BIOMED research institute
Prof. dr. Jules Poukens details the novel fabrication technology at a recent press conference
The Layerwise team explains its 3D printing process
Dr. Ingeborg van Kroonenburgh with a model of the patient's jaw bone
Slide showing the patient undergoing surgery
The 3D-printed titanium lower mandible implant sporting some healthy new choppers
Model of the patient's jaw bone
Dr. Ingeborg van Kroonenburgh shows off the 3D-printed implant
Dr. Ingeborg van Kroonenburgh demonstrates the patient-specific fit of the new implant
An 83-year old woman is the first in the world to receive a full 3D-printed titanium lower jaw implant
View gallery - 12 images

The ability to create your own replacement curtain rings, door knobs or even a custom chess set at home using a 3D printer like the Replicator or the Cubify 3D printer has the potential to knock global production models on their heads. Such advances are certainly impressive but not quite in the same league as those being made in the field of medicine. We've already seen small bone-like objects printed by Washington State University researchers, and now an 83-year old patient with a serious jaw infection has become the first person to receive a full 3D-printed titanium lower jaw implant. Amazingly, the combined effort by researchers and engineers from Belgium and the Netherlands is said to have allowed the patient unrestricted mandibular movement within a day of surgery.

The researchers say that the implant's recipient had suffered from the progressive infection for some time, which had caused a large wound on her face. Microsurgical reconstruction was considered as a possible solution, but would have meant long hours on the operating table followed by an extended stay in hospital. Removal of just the damaged bone was also an option but there would have been so little remaining in this case that the jaw could not have functioned properly. It was therefore deemed necessary to remove the entire lower mandible and replace it with an implant.

Slide showing the patient undergoing surgery

Prof. dr. Jules Poukens, Prof. dr. Ivo Lambrichts, and Dr. Ingeborg van Kroonenburgh from the Functional Morphology research group of the University of Hasselt's BIOMED research institute worked with Dr. Ir. Michäel Daenen from the Xios University College (Belgium), Prof. dr. Jos Vander Sloten from the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium), Maikel Beerens from Xilloc Medical BV (the Netherlands) and engineers from the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons of the Orbis Medical Center (the Netherlands) on the design and implementation of the implant. The actual 3D-printing used additive laser melting technology and was undertaken by LayerWise NV of Belgium. Other implant production methods are said to take days before an implant is ready to be used, whereas a 3D-printed implant is ready to go in a couple of hours.

The patient-specific 3D-printed lower jaw was fabricated from titanium powder and weighs approximately 107 g (3.77 ounces), which is a little heavier than its bone equivalent. It was coated with plasma sprayed artificial bone (a hydroxy-apatite bone substitute compound) and sites for fixing future prosthetics were incorporated into the design. The patient underwent surgery in June 2011, where the inflamed mandible was removed and the custom implant slotted in. The contour of the patient's face was then restored. The patient is reported to have shown normal function the day after surgery, although full healing took longer.

Source: University of Hasselt

View gallery - 12 images
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3 comments
furnortner
Hmm, wonder how they are able to get the jaw muscle\'s to attach to the new jaw?
yrag
furnortner-YES-exactly what I was wondering-you beat me to it!
Great story!
quiet
WOW totally WOW is all i can say. i sure wish this was available for my daughter who turns 16 this year. a dream come true. feel free to visit her at www.caringbridge.org/visit/kimtolin1 and read her journal and the daily pain she lives with and no doctors/hospitals will help her because of money. God bless you. sue