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Additive manufacturing and technical strategies for improving outcomes in breast reconstructive surgery

Authors :
Domenico Speranza
Roberto De Santis
Giuseppe Catanuto
Ilaria Onofrio
Teresa Russo
Nicola Rocco
Antonello Accurso
Massimo Martorelli
Maurizio B. Nava
Marco Domingos
Olimpia Oliviero
Antonio Gloria
Ida Papallo
Giovanni Improta
Rocco, Nicola
Papallo, Ida
Bruno Nava, Maurizio
Catanuto, Giuseppe
Accurso, Antonello
Onofrio, Ilaria
Oliviero, Olimpia
Improta, Giovanni
Speranza, Domenico
Domingos, Marco
Russo, Teresa
De Santis, Roberto
Martorelli, Massimo
Gloria, Antonio
Publica
Source :
Acta IMEKO 9 (2020): 74–79. doi:10.21014/acta_imeko.v9i4.754, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Rocco N.; Papallo I.; Nava M.B.; Catanuto G.; Accurso A.; Onofrio I.; Oliviero O.; Improta G.; Speranza D.; Domingos M.; Russo T.; de Santis R.; Martorelli M.; Gloria A./titolo:Additive manufacturing and technical strategies for improving outcomes in breast reconstructive surgery/doi:10.21014%2Facta_imeko.v9i4.754/rivista:Acta IMEKO/anno:2020/pagina_da:74/pagina_a:79/intervallo_pagine:74–79/volume:9
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

It has been widely reported that breast reconstruction improves the quality of life of women who undergo mastectomy for breast cancer. This approach provides many psychological advantages. Today, different techniques are available for the breast oncoplastic surgeon that involve the use of breast implants and autologous tissues, also offering interesting results in terms of aesthetic and patient-reported outcomes. On the other hand, advanced technologies and design strategies (i.e. design for additive manufacturing, reverse engineering) may allow the development of customised porous structures with tailored morphological, mechanical, biological, and mass transport properties. For this reason, the current study deals with the challenges, principles, and methods of developing 3D additive manufactured structures in breast reconstructive surgery. Specifically, the aim was to design 3D additive manufactured poly(ε-caprolactone) scaffolds with different architectures (i.e. lay-down patterns). Preliminary mechanical and biological analyses have shown the effect of the lay-down pattern on the performances of the manufactured structures.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta IMEKO 9 (2020): 74–79. doi:10.21014/acta_imeko.v9i4.754, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Rocco N.; Papallo I.; Nava M.B.; Catanuto G.; Accurso A.; Onofrio I.; Oliviero O.; Improta G.; Speranza D.; Domingos M.; Russo T.; de Santis R.; Martorelli M.; Gloria A./titolo:Additive manufacturing and technical strategies for improving outcomes in breast reconstructive surgery/doi:10.21014%2Facta_imeko.v9i4.754/rivista:Acta IMEKO/anno:2020/pagina_da:74/pagina_a:79/intervallo_pagine:74–79/volume:9
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89359e0bb4ebf7a11349f4d95a8e9952
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21014/acta_imeko.v9i4.754