When Ariana Garcia was six weeks old, she suddenly stopped breathing. When she went limp in her father’s arms, her parents rushed her to the emergency room. They sat in the waiting room for hour after agonizing hour until finally a doctor could finally explain what was happening. Her mother, Anne Garcia, recalls that experience in great detail:
“I didn’t know if she was going to make it. We went into a conference room where our doctor sat down with us and he started drawing a picture of a heart and he explained to us that Ari had been born with a critical congenital heart defect and that the only thing that we could do was an emergency, open heart surgery to save her.”
“Pediatric heart surgery is the hardest thing that I can imagine a person doing. A surgeon doesn’t know what he’s going to see until he opens a child’s chest. Every heart is different and every cardiopathy is different,” said Garcia. “A baby’s heart is the size of a walnut, and surgeons need to go in and move around structures that are as small and thin as a human hair; and they’re doing it with their own two hands. And all of this is occurring against a ticking clock.”
“Having something in your hands, and being able to turn it any way you want, and to be able to cut and open it up and see the inside; and to be able to physically hold it, to feel it, is something that can’t be replicated in a computer.”
Ariana has been doing well since her operation, but Anne Garcia wasn’t ready to let this idea go just because her daughter had already recovered from the surgery. She knew that there were many, many other parents out there going through exactly what she had experienced and children whose lives could not only be benefited but possibly even saved by getting such a tool integrated into the regular preparation done by pediatric surgeons.
While there is no doubt that surgeons want to have access to this tool, it is complicated by the fact that insurance companies don’t have a code for this type of procedure.
In the meantime, Ariana continues to make progress towards recovery and OpHeart continues to pave the way for healthier future for pediatric patients.
Let us know your thoughts on the benefits of 3D printed surgical models in the OpHeart forum thread over at 3DPB.com.