A Personalized 3D-Printed Model for Preoperative Evaluation in Thyroid Surgery.
The anatomic structure of the surgical area of thyroid cancer is complex.
APA
Li P, Chen Y, et al. (2023). A Personalized 3D-Printed Model for Preoperative Evaluation in Thyroid Surgery.. Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE(192). https://doi.org/10.3791/64508
MLA
Li P, et al.. "A Personalized 3D-Printed Model for Preoperative Evaluation in Thyroid Surgery.." Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE, no. 192, 2023.
PMID
36876929
DOI
10.3791/64508
Abstract
The anatomic structure of the surgical area of thyroid cancer is complex. It is very important to comprehensively and carefully evaluate the tumor location and its relation with the capsule, trachea, esophagus, nerves, and blood vessels before operation. This paper introduces an innovative 3D-printed model establishment method based on computerized tomography (CT) DICOM images. We established a personalized 3D-printed model of the cervical thyroid surgery field for each patient who needed thyroid surgery to help clinicians evaluate the key points and difficulties of the surgery and select the operation methods of key parts as a basis. The results showed that this model is conducive to preoperative discussion and the formulation of operation strategies. In particular, as a result of the clear display of the recurrent laryngeal nerve and parathyroid gland locations in the thyroid operation field, injury to them can be avoided during surgery, the difficulty of thyroid surgery reduced, and the incidence of postoperative hypoparathyroidism and complications related to recurrent laryngeal nerve injury reduced too. Moreover, this 3D-printed model is intuitive and aids communication for the signing of informed consent by patients before surgery.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Parathyroid Glands; Thyroid Neoplasms; Neck; Printing, Three-Dimensional
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- Association of PD-L1 and PD-1 Expression With Clinicopathological Characteristics and Prognosis in Upper Tract Urothelial Carcinoma.
- Light-promoted engineered bacterial DNase I therapeutic intervention to enable potent cancer photoimmunotherapy.
- SLC13 sodium-carboxylate transporters: function, regulation and pathophysiological implications in human disease.
- Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1-targeted photosensitizer as a dual-activator of pyroptosis and the STING pathway for enhanced cancer photoimmunotherapy.
- Engineered Bacteria-Driven Biohybrid Microrobots Potentiate IL-2 Immunotherapy by Evoking Pyroptosis.