Costa Rica: Researchers Design 3D Printed Medical Device for Suturing Extremities

Our skin protects us from invading microorganisms and foreign substances, eliminates harmful toxins, helps to regulate our core body temperature, and is in charge of receiving both tactile and thermal stimulation. But, it’s fragile and easily damaged, which can lead to open wounds that get infected. Michelle Orozco-Brenes, José A. Jiménez-Chavarría, and Dagoberto Arias-Aguilar, researchers out of Costa Rica, published a paper, titled “Design of a medical device for superficial suturing upper and lower extremities,” about their work creating a medical suturing device.

“This work presents the design for a class 2 medical device that meets the basic requirements of the current and known suturing methods in Costa Rica,” the abstract states. “The design process was achieved in three main stages, (i)Research on similar technologies; e.g. The operation principles of a sewing machine, materials used; (ii) The study of types of skin traumas; (iii) General approach toward the suturing device, including device functionality, integration with the human body and manufacturing process. The device model was designed and fabricated using 3D printing technology, this allowed the team to analyze ergonomics, the assembly of the parts and the equipment’s motion. The printed prototype made it possible for potential users to provide feedback on the design and suggestions for improvement.”

Figure 1. SolidWorks design of the medical device to be printed.

Suturing means to connect blood vessels with a specific material, such as thread, when tissue is torn in a way that halts natural healing. You can find many suturing devices on the market around the world, but Costa Rican hospitals don’t typically use them, as they are complex and costly. So the team set out to design a class 2 FDA electronic medical device that could both reduce tissue damage and uniformly, and quickly, suture a wound so an “aesthetically acceptable” scar is left behind.

“The idea for a medical device to suture arose for three main reasons,” the researchers wrote. “First, physicians were noticing poorly sutured wounds that would result in large scars. These in some cases required further procedures like plastic surgery. Also, time consumption, making the search for a device that would make the method faster a necessity. Finally, sutures stitched by hand are sometimes left too loose or too tight, causing bleeding from the wound.”

Table 2. Schematic representation of the function of the suturing medical device.

Device specifications were functionality, cost, durability, modularity, and reliability. They used SOLIDWORKS software to create the design for their model, which required three specific functions:

  • Stabilize the skin
  • Rotate the needle on its axis to join tissue sections
  • Initiate and finish with the least possible amount of user interference

“The final design was oriented to have the area and volume of the shell as similar as possible for the needle to rotate 360° without any problem,” the researchers explained.

In order to test out several functionality features, they 3D printed a prototype first, using Polyjet technology to fabricate the piston and and an FDM printer for most of the other parts. Due to its high strength and toughness, corrosion and fatigue resistance, and low friction coefficient, they used the AISI 316L alloy for the prototype.

The suturing device has seven main components. The shell encases the device, while two guides allow the movement of the guide pin, which is used to tie a double knot. Rollers provide the rotational movement that allows for the suturing, while a piston gives the rollers their movement. The final parts are a ½ circle needle with tapered tip, and nylon thread, which has good elasticity for skin retention and closure.

Figure 2. Final design for the suturing medical device.

To use the device, the needle is first threaded in its initial position at the top of the shell, and then set in the rollers. The piston lowers the shell, and the needle is rotated 270° to pinch the tissue for suturing. The knot is initiated when the rollers, guided by the holder, turn 45° to the right, and the pin is set in place over the guide. The needle makes a 360° turn on its axis, and the guides turn over the shell and let go of the guide pin, “letting it fall due to gravity over the guides” beneath it to finish the first knot. The first few steps are repeated, and after the final full turn, the user tenses the thread through the top hole, until it’s kept that way through the guide pin. The lower guides will release, and the guide pin is removed, completing the double knot.

“After the prototype was assembled and design functions checked, the final step required a survey,” the team wrote. “The study contained questions about the medical device presented via prototype and they were asked to elaborate on their answers regarding their opinion as health professionals.”

Table 3. Survey on trained medical physicians.

The 3D printed prototype device was presented to Dr. Stephanie Gómez Najéra, Dr. Pamela Villareal Valverde, and Dr. Tatiana Piedra Chacón. The numbers listed in the survey results are the average between these three Costa Rican physicians, and the scale, based on the Likert scale, goes from 1-5, with 1 being strongly disagree and 5 being strongly agree.

“The comments reference that the usefulness depends on the context of where it would be applied, for example a jail or emergency room,” the researchers wrote of the doctors’ opinions on their device.

“One main drawback is that the device may not be suitable for all types of wounds. Other concerns raised by the physicians were related to the price and size of the device.”

Based on observations from the survey, the researchers modified the final prototype to “improve its ergonomic factor” by adding a holder at the top of the shell for more stability and easier manipulation.

Next steps include standardizing parts of the prototype so that some pieces can be purchased in the market, and optimizing the mechanisms, like the servomotor, sensors, and motors, that generate the device’s movements.

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Dassault Systèmes Selects Xometry as Prime Partner for Marketplace Integration

At 3DEXPERIENCE World 2020, CAD giant Dassault Systèmes made a number of announcements related to its 3DEXPERIENCE suite and SOLIDWORKS CAD software. One piece of news in particular has particular relevance for the 3D printing industry: Xometry’s manufacturing platform will be tied into Dassault’s SOLIDWORKS and CATIA applications.

Within the design environments of SOLIDWORKS and CATIA, users will be able to automatically and directly access Xometry price quotes on MAKE Marketplace. Engineers are therefore able to obtain a cost estimate for a part as it is being designed, without the need for manually uploading and checking the price of parts using a variety of online service bureaus.

For CAD users, remaining within the confines of the design environment is key to maintaining efficiency and an optimal workflow. With every new software update, software developers like Dassault count the number of clicks it takes to perform a given action. In the case of getting a quick manufacturing quote in SOLIDWORKS and CATIA, it now takes one, as opposed to about a dozen in a web interface.

Due to the digitization of manufacturing as made possible by technologies like 3D printing, the lines between designer, engineer and machine operator are starting to blur. As a result, engineers and designers are playing an increasing role in the actual production of a part. This latest update allows them to source the cost of a part as they are designing it.

A screenshot of Make Marketplace within SOLIDWORKS. Image courtesy of SOLIDWORKS.

Sébastien Massart, head of corporate strategy for Dassault Systèmes, said of the partnership, “We launched the MAKE Marketplace in 2018 to make it easy for customers to design and manufacture. Our partnership with Xometry takes this a step further. Customers can order high quality additive manufacturing or CNC machining parts in one click at the right price, thanks to Xometry instant quoting capabilities. This is all part of our vision to continuously reduce the friction that customers face going from design to manufacturing.”

Xometry is Dassault’s first “prime partner” for its MAKE Marketplace, which purportedly signifies qualified service providers with industrial-grade quality certifications, high production capacities and satisfaction rates. Other prime partners will be added to the marketplace in the future.

The news of its partnership with Xometry came with the overall update of Dassault’s 3DEXPERIENCE, a cloud-based platform that connects all of the software company’s apps in a single environment. This year’s update includes a full integration of SOLIDWORKS with 3DEXPERIENCE, meaning that users no longer have to rely on the desktop version of the CAD software and can connect more directly with the larger platform’s apps. Perhaps the most unique announcement from the event was that Dassault is developing a digital twin of the human body.

For Xometry, the partnership with Dassault is a significant one. After obtaining a $50M investment last year, the manufacturing platform will be placed in front of the eyes of over two million engineers and designers via SOLIDWORKS, one of the most popular CAD software packages on the market.

The post Dassault Systèmes Selects Xometry as Prime Partner for Marketplace Integration appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

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French industrial 3D printer provider Prodways Group has announced the integration of Dassault Systèmes’ 3DEXPERIENCE platform as well as the acquisition of a minority stake in its North American partner, XD Innovation.  The 3DEXPERIENCE platform encompasses 3D CAD design software, SOLIDWORKS, CATIA, PLM solution SIMULIA, and additional product development applications. Through the partnership, Prodways will launch XD Innovation Europe, […]

Farmer builds DIY seed metering system with 3D printed parts

Norfolk farmer Jonny Leech has used 3D printing to build a precise maize seed metering system. This system is essential for consistent crop performance and improving his farm’s patchy forage maize yields. With the use of additive manufacturing, Leech has made significant cost savings while achieving similar performance to the ready-made machines.  Designing and driving […]

Lucie Trejtnarová and Fillamentum create biodegradable 3D printed sandals

Lucie Trejtnarová, a postgraduate student at the Faculty of Multimedia Communication, Tomas Bata University in Zlín (UTB), Czech Republic, and materials manufacturer Fillamentum have developed the Organic 3D printed shoe collection.  As its name suggests, the Organic shoe collection was created in an effort to create sustainable footwear and accessories. The experimental sandal line integrates […]

4D Printed Shape Memory Polymers Given Better Performance & Recyclability

Authors Ang Li, Adithya Challapalli, and Guoqiang Li explore a trend that continues to grow: 4D printing. Their findings are explained in the recently published “4D Printing of Recyclable Lightweight Architectures Using High Recovery Stress Shape Memory Polymer.” Here, the benefits of smart materials that can adapt to their environment are explored as the researchers consider challenges in 3D printing self-healing shape memory polymer (SMP) microlattices, and move forward to develop their own thermoset polymer offering the following features:

  • High strength
  • High recovery stress
  • Perfect shape recovery
  • Good recyclability
  • 3D printability with DLP

The ability to create lightweight structures is one of the greatest benefits of 3D printing, but users are continually looking for better ways to have it all, including good mechanical properties. This is especially important in advanced engineering applications where capabilities such as the following are in demand:

  • Shape memory
  • Recovery stress
  • Damage healing
  • Recyclability

Schematic of recyclable and shape memory microlattices using 3D-RSMP. (a) 3D printing (direct light printing (DLP) of advanced multifunctional microlattice structures using the 3D-RSMP. (b) Compression programming of the printed microlattice to a temporary shape and recovery to the original shape. (c) Recycling of the ball milled multifunctional microlattices under high pressure and high temperature. (d) The remolded specimen for mechanical tests.

3D printed shape memory polymers tend to offer better potential, offering higher speed in production, less energy consumption to produce, and less post-processing. Shape memory effect is usually improved too, in what is ultimately the process of 4D printing, bringing forth ‘stimuli-responsive self-evolving features’ which offer better performance for load-bearing parts and structures. Before this study, however, the researchers found a resource for SMPs with high stress output lacking. Creating a higher-performance SMP meant turning to thermosets and either DLP or SLA methods.

The research team created a specialized 3D-RSMP resin for universal DLP 3D printing, offering mechanical properties they believe to be as good as some of the ‘best commercial DLP resins without multifunctionality,’ with higher shape memory and better self-healing qualities. 3D structures were designed in SolidWorks and then 3D printed on the Asiga Pico 2, with 3D-RSMP resin with 0.15mm layer thickness. Samples were also tested for recycling, crushed and broken, and then ground up via ball milling. Afterward, the researchers added the particles to a steel mold, with pressure applied at 200 °C or 150 °C for 2 hours.

Recycling of the crushed microlattices. (a) A recycling process is described: broken and failed shape memory microlattices were crushed into powders via ball milling; a steel mold was used for recycling milled powders of 3D printed microlattice structures under varying conditions. A mechanical test was performed on the remolded rectangular specimen made of the milled powders. (b) Typical tensile stress vs. strain curves of the remolded rectangular specimens obtained under varying conditions ((200C12M2H represents molding at 200 °C and under 12MPa pressure for 2h; 150C12M2H represents molding at 150 °C and under 12MPa pressure for 2h; and 150C9M2H represents molding at 150 °C and under 9MPa pressure for 2h) with a loading rate=0.5mm/min at room temperature.

The 3D-RSMP product appears so far to be the only SMP that can be both 3D printed and recycled—with recovery stress larger than 10MPa. In terms of application, the researchers also found their cubic microlattice to have the highest mechanical strength ‘with comparable or even higher specific compressive strength than metallic microlattices and ceramic microlattices without shape memory effect.’

 “The results show that the cubic microlattice has mechanical strength comparable to or even greater than that of metallic microlattices, good SME, decent recovery stress, and recyclability, making it the first multifunctional lightweight architecture (MLA) for potential multifunctional lightweight load carrying structural applications,” concluded the researchers.

“Future work will be focusing on improving the recycling efficiency of the 3D-RSMP and the microlattice, and further optimizing the geometry through topological optimization or biomimicry in order to obtain microlattices with higher mechanical strength and shape memory effect for advanced structural and engineering applications.”

Mechanical properties of various microlattices upon compression. (a) Compressive strength vs. apparent density plots of various microlattices and foams. (b) Compressive modulus vs. apparent density plots of the three microlattices in this study.

 

While 3D printing is a source of fascination around the world, still, 4D printing takes fabrication to another magical level as researchers produce innovations like tunable metamaterials, multi-metals, and processes for other industrial applications.

Tree unit cell geometries have been drawn in Solidworks and then assembled to the corresponding microlattice structures. (Row 1: unit cells, from left to right: Octet unit cell (OCT UC); Kelvin unit cell (KVNUC); Cubic unit cell (CBC UC), Row 2: 3D printed microlattice structures, from left to right: Octet microlattice structure (OCT LTC), Kelvin microlattice structure (KVN LTC), and cubic microlattice structure (CBC LTC); Row 3: multi-length scale microlattices, from left to right: 1st order octet truss (1O OCT) and 2nd order octet truss (2O OCT)). (Te scale bar applies to all the five lattice structures).

[Source / Images: ‘4D Printing of Recyclable Lightweight Architectures Using High Recovery Stress Shape Memory Polymer’]

 

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Thor3D and Polyga enter 3D scanning and software distribution agreement

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On-demand manufacturing service Xometry raises $50 million in equity funding

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Dassault Systèmes financial results show double digit software revenue growth in Q1 2019

Dassault Systèmes, the developer of 3D design software SOLIDWORKS and the 3DEXPERIENCE platform, has reported its financial results for the first quarter of financial year 2019. Total revenue for the quarter is up 17% on the comparative period, from €818.7 million to €958.9 million. Of this revenue, Software constitutes €855.3 million for Q1 2019, a €120 million and 16.35% […]