A 3D-printed, dynamic, patient-specific knee simulator
ISSN: 1355-2546
Article publication date: 10 July 2024
Issue publication date: 30 July 2024
Abstract
Purpose
3D-printed devices proved their efficacy across different clinical applications, helping personalize medical treatments. This paper aims to present the procedure for the design and production of patient-specific dynamic simulators of the human knee. The scope of these simulators is to improve surgical outcomes, investigate the motion and load response of the human knee and standardize in-vitro experiments for testing orthopedic devices through a personalized physical representation of the patient’s joint.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper tested the approach on three volunteers. For each, a patient-specific mathematical joint model was defined from an magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the knee. The model guided the CAD design of the simulators, which was then realized through stereolithography printing. Manufacturing accuracy was tested by quantifying the differences between 3D-printed and CAD geometry. To assess the simulator functionality, its motion was measured through a stereophotogrammetric system and compared with the natural tibio-femoral motion of the volunteers, measured as a sequence of static MRI.
Findings
The 3D-printing accuracy was very high, with average differences between ideal and printed parts below ± 0.1 mm. However, the assembly of different 3D-printed parts resulted in a higher average error of 0.97 mm and peak values of 2.33 mm. Despite that, the rotational and translational accuracy of the simulator was about 5° and 4 mm, respectively.
Originality/value
Although improvements in the production process are needed, the proposed simulators successfully replicated the individual articular behavior. The proposed approach is general and thus extendible to other articulations.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Funding information: This research study was funded by the NSF IRES Track I Award # 1827075.
Declarations: Ethics approval and consent to participate: Experimental MRI measures were performed on volunteers.
Consent for publication: Authors give necessary consent for publication in the Journal.
Conflict of interest: The authors declare no competing interests.
Citation
Conconi, M., Sancisi, N., Backus, R., Argenti, C. and Shih, A.J. (2024), "A 3D-printed, dynamic, patient-specific knee simulator", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. 30 No. 7, pp. 1380-1392. https://doi.org/10.1108/RPJ-11-2023-0388
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited