One of the worst things a child can experience is to be set apart due to a physical deformity or abnormality. Even the smallest things can lead to angst that causes social anxiety.
Coupled with severe risk for infection that makes it impossible to play or hang out with other kids, seven-year-old Grace Kabelenga has had incredible challenges in her early life. And while the glamour and sheer umph of so many innovations that we see in 3D printing tend to take center stage, it’s the behind-the-scenes action in hospitals and operating rooms that offers true inspiration, and one can only imagine the rewards for the patients–and the surgeons as well.
The use of 3D printing technology in medical implants is becoming more and more widespread as doctors (and patients, as well as parents of patients) who are grasping for solutions to problems that could not have been as easily met years ago, are now able to use 3D scanning of CTs and MRIs, converting them to corresponding implants, models, and more for a wide range of uses.
Performed in Cape Town, South Africa at the Tygerberg Hospital in May 2015, doctors were able to convert Grace’s CT into a 3D model, which was consequently made into a 3D printed ‘lattice framework.’ It was successfully implanted into her forehead and the results certainly do look nothing short of miraculous. The bone will grow around the 3D printed lattice and then it will biodegrade safely.
“This is just guidelines for where the skull would like to be,” said American surgeon Dr Kenneth Salyer, founder of the World Craniofacial Foundation. “The implant is ultimately absorbable and after six months it begins to break down and disappear. By that time new bone has started to regenerate and creates a new skull.”
The overall condition was due to an encephalocele, where the brain is actually exposed through a skull opening, Grace’s face had been extremely deformed. The condition, which developed during her mother’s pregnancy, caused an actual hole in her mouth where brain matter was hanging.
“When she was born she was rushed to a children’s hospital,” her mother, Ngula, said. “There was so many doctors but they told us they couldn’t do anything because it was beyond their ability.”
‘”I’m very happy to see her, she looks beautiful and she has really changed,” Ngula said. “When we get home there’s going to be a big celebration.”
The reasons for the surgery, although certainly important for self-esteem and not feeling ostracized in society due to appearance, were actually not about aesthetics.
“The reason to operate was to save her life,” said Dr. Salyer. “She couldn’t live that way, and would not survive long term.”
The next hurdle will be dealing with the condition that makes it nearly impossible for Grace to play with others her own age. Doctors think that eventually they may be able to solve this issue for her, but up until this point if she fell and hit the open area of her skull and developed an infection or caught germs from other kids, the risk of her becoming seriously ill or even dying was very real. Grace has also never been to school.
For now, the most important issue is dealt with in allowing for her skull to be closed up as well as working to create the appropriate bone matter for her forehead. With that completed, it’s logical to think that the risk of infection may decrease and she will be able to lead a much more normal life soon in terms of being social and getting outside to play like a normal girl her age.
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[Source: Metro | Photos: Barcroft India]