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A high-fidelity personalised 3d printed simulator for the left atrial appendage occlusion procedure

Benigno Marco Fanni (BioCardioLab – Bioengineering Unit, Fondazione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio per la Ricerca Medica e di Sanità Pubblica, Massa, Italy)
Emanuele Gasparotti (BioCardioLab – Bioengineering Unit, Fondazione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio per la Ricerca Medica e di Sanità Pubblica, Massa, Italy)
Augusto Esposito (Adult Cardiology Unit, Fondazione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio per la Ricerca Medica e di Sanità Pubblica, Massa, Italy)
Francesca Danielli (LaBS – Department of Chemistry, Materials and Chemical Engineering “Giulio Natta”, Polytechnic of Milan, Milan, Italy)
Francesca Berti (LaBS – Department of Chemistry, Materials and Chemical Engineering “Giulio Natta”, Polytechnic of Milan, Milan, Italy)
Sergio Berti (Adult Cardiology Unit, Fondazione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio per la Ricerca Medica e di Sanità Pubblica, Massa, Italy)
Giancarlo Pennati (LaBS – Department of Chemistry, Materials and Chemical Engineering “Giulio Natta”, Polytechnic of Milan, Milan, Italy)
Lorenza Petrini (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Polytechnic of Milan, Milan, Italy)
Simona Celi (BioCardioLab – Bioengineering Unit, Fondazione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio per la Ricerca Medica e di Sanità Pubblica, Massa, Italy)

Rapid Prototyping Journal

ISSN: 1355-2546

Article publication date: 3 October 2024

41

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to develop a realistic 3D printing-based simulator for the training and planning of the left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO) to be used in the cath lab.

Design/methodology/approach

Starting from a pre-operative computed tomography dataset of a patient already treated with LAAO, the model was obtained, consisting in the right and left heart, opportunely assembled to replicate the position and orientation of the patient's anatomy while lying on the cath lab table. Different 3D printing techniques and materials were used to mimic the interaction between the cardiac tissue and the clinical instrumentation. The simulator was tested in the cath lab under proper image guidance by three LAAO expert operators. The clinicians were required to assign a score in terms of realism to each material used to fabricate the fossa ovalis and the LAA.

Findings

The simulated interventions were successfully performed by the operators, who were able to navigate in the system and release the occluder device as during a real procedure. The intraoperative images acquired during the simulations were highly comparable with data from a real intervention, with a mean percentage difference below 10%.

Originality/value

This study demonstrated the feasibility of the proposed simulator to faithfully replicate the LAAO procedure and its potentiality to be used for multiple purposes, including the training of the young clinicians, the evaluation of the most complicated cases and the design of novel occluder devices, in a fully realistic setting.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research was funded by the Italian Ministry of Health with the project PLACE (Planning LAa ClosurE), grant number RF-2021-12375208.

Citation

Fanni, B.M., Gasparotti, E., Esposito, A., Danielli, F., Berti, F., Berti, S., Pennati, G., Petrini, L. and Celi, S. (2024), "A high-fidelity personalised 3d printed simulator for the left atrial appendage occlusion procedure", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/RPJ-03-2024-0126

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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