Wurth

Surgeons Turning to 3D Printing & Pre-Surgical Planning for Jaw Surgeries in Korea

Formnext

Share this Article

In ‘Comparison of time and cost between conventional surgical planning and virtual surgical planning in orthognathic surgery in Korea,’ authors Si-Yeon Park, Dae-Seok Hwang, Jae-Min Song, and Uk-Kuy Kim explore the topics of 3D printing in the medical realm, but in regards to a very specific type of procedure. The study involved patients undergoing surgery of the jaw at the Pusan National University Dental Hospital from December 2017 to August 2018.

Intense planning is required for orthognathic surgery, with ‘accurate and delicate’ patient data analysis required. Traditional analysis is detailed and arduous, while virtual surgical planning (VSP) and 3D analysis involve:

  • Analyzing skeletal deformities
  • Performing virtual surgery
  • Fabricating a surgical stent

Patients involved in the study had received Le Fort I osteotomy and bilateral sagittal split osteotomy (LFI+BSSO) or only bilateral sagittal split osteotomy (BSSO). Preoperative steps were taken at the hospital, with surgical planning performed through conventional and virtual methods. Patients were divided into two groups:

  • Group One – patients who underwent LFI and BSSO regardless of genioplasty
  • Group Two – patients who had undergone BSSO regardless of genioplasty

All patients underwent radiography. For Group One, the patients required maxillary and mandibular impression, with facebow transfer required for conventional analysis. For Group Two, the patients needed one pair of maxillary and mandibular impressions. The study included 47 patients, all of whom underwent surgery performed by one surgeon.

While conventional planning may often be responsible for errors, along with diminishing accuracy, virtual planning offers all the opposite benefits, preventing mistakes and improving precision and accuracy. Many surgeons are turning to VSP because of the many advantages outweighing more traditional techniques.

Stent fabrication progress in conventional surgical planning

Along with being more accurate, VSP is also much faster; however, affordability—while theorized to offer a great advantage—did not factor in during this study. Virtual planning was found to be more expensive because the stent was outsourced for fabrication. The surgeon involved in the study still expects that VSP would be more cost-effective when all factors are considered—and especially in the amount of time saved.

Virtual surgery in virtual surgical planning

Stent fabrication progress in virtual surgical planning

“In this study, each step of VSP and CSP was not performed in the same place. Since it was performed separately, it is possible that its accuracy and cost-effectiveness decreased when it was processed in different laboratories,” concluded the researchers. “As a result, if the hospital is well equipped with software and hardware, each step of VSP and CSP can be performed in the same hospital and it will increase the cost-effectiveness and accuracy of the process by reducing errors and extra charges from the outsourced laboratory.

“With its high accuracy and time efficiency, VSP is the future for orthognathic surgery planning. As the VSP program continues to evolve, research on how to reduce the work time and cost for each step should be done.”

3D printing has made enormous impacts in the vast field of medicine, but especially the world of 3D models and surgical pre-planning. This spans so many different types of procedures meant to study, diagnose, and treat issues such as prostate cancer, knee replacement, and even prevention of heart-valve complications.

What do you think of this news? Let us know your thoughts! Join the discussion of this and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com.

Progress workflow and performer for CSP and VSP

Average time for each step in CSP and VSP

[Source / Image: ‘Comparison of time and cost between conventional surgical planning and virtual surgical planning in orthognathic surgery in Korea’]


Share this Article


Recent News

Australian Startup H3D Raises $5.8M to Speed Up Custom Dental and Hearing Devices

3D Printing News Briefs, September 24, 2025: Survey, AM Curriculum, UHPC Rheology, & More



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Featured

Does the Fed Rate Cut Mean Anything for Manufacturers?

About a year ago, the Federal Reserve issued the “jumbo” rate cut, reducing interest rates for the first time since hiking them to their highest levels in decades, a process...

MacLean-Fogg & Fraunhofer ILT Make 156 Kg 3D Printed Toyota Tooling Insert

Fastener & tooling firm MacLean-Fogg Company and Fraunhofer ILT have created a 156 kg conformally cooled die casting insert, made out of the firm’s own L-40 tool steel powder. This...

3DPOD 272: Kevin Kassekert, VulcanForms CEO

Kevin Kassekert has deep experience building factories for Tesla and has worked in the semiconductor industry. He now helms VulcanForms and is looking to scale their high-yield Laser Powder Bed...

3D Printing News Briefs, September 20, 2025: Standards, Floor Slabs, Wastewater Treatment, & More

In this weekend’s 3D Printing News Briefs, we’ll start with standards news from ASTM. Then, we’ll move on to a new 3D printable alloy from QuesTek Innovations, and Autodesk Research...