Medical technology is constantly changing for the better. Diseases, disorders, and medical conditions which were incurable years ago, are now beginning to finally meet their matches. We are continuously seeing new medications hit the market, capable of treating various conditions with more efficiency than ever before. With this said, however, there are still many diseases that are not curable, and many conditions that go untreated due to the inability to properly diagnose them. One man, named Paul Heathcote, had gone 20 years without a diagnosis for a problem which was causing him significant pain.
“My ‘story’ is that after being seriously assaulted in 1988, I have been complaining of pain [in] my throat on the left side, difficulty with swallowing, face pain on the left side and eye ache on the left side,” explained Heathcote to 3DPrint.com. “For over 20 years doctors and consultants could not tell me what was causing these problems despite me having numerous xrays and scans.”
Then on one weekend in 2011, Heathcote experienced pain like he had not experienced previously. It was so severe that he was admitted to the hospital with a suspected stroke. After running tests, doctors determined that he in fact did not suffer from a stroke, but unfortunately they could not tell him what the cause of this tremendous pain was. This is when Heathcote decided to takes thing into his own hands and use his knowledge of 3D imaging to do so.
“Having learn[ed] how to generate 3D images from a CT scan, I saw what I thought to be a fracture of my hyoid bone on the left side,” he tells us. “I printed off some images and took them to my doctor who told me I had suffered a fracture of the hyoid bone which had not united (known as a non-union fracture) and referred me to a consultant at the Ear Nose & Throat dept. at my local hospital. In the meantime I had a 3D print done of a cervical spine CT scan I had which included the hyoid bone.”
“It seems that, but for the 3D imaging and the printed model, the doctors would not have been able to diagnose the cause of my pain and how best to manage it,” said Heathcote.
It still amazes me that today, with the tremendous benefits seen through the 3D imaging and 3D printing of medical models, every hospital throughout the world isn’t trying to acclimate themselves with this technology. The potential is there for much more accurate diagnoses, and treatment through the use of these visualization aids.
What do you think about the fact that it wasn’t until Heathcote took initiative himself that a proper diagnosis was made with the help of 3D imaging and 3D printing? Discuss in the Hyoid Bone Syndrome Diagnosis forum thread on 3DPB.com.