nano3Dprint Teams Up With Children’s Orthopedic Institute and Research Lab

The collaboration will enable Dr. Billi's team to use nano3print’s 3D printing technologies to build integrated microcontroller systems for sensor-embedded devices to benefit children, the organizations note.

The collaboration will enable Dr. Billi's team to use nano3print’s 3D printing technologies to build integrated microcontroller systems for sensor-embedded devices to benefit children, the organizations note.

nano3Dprint has entered into a collaboration with the Billi Research Lab, whose objective is to improve patient quality of life by developing technologies and solutions to address clinical needs. The Billi Research Lab is supported by the Luskin Orthopaedic Institute for Children (LuskinOIC).

The collaboration will enable Dr. Billi and his team to use nano3print’s 3D printing technologies to build integrated microcontroller systems for sensor-embedded devices that will benefit children served by LuskinOIC. Somedevices currently under development include scoliosis braces, smart casts and Ponseti braces, which are used to treat clubfoot.

“We’re looking forward to utilizing nano3Dprint’s B3300 Dual-Dispensing 3D Printer to further our research and development of wearables, fusion sensors and smart textiles. Current additive technologies are not versatile enough to allow us to build the complex, multifunctional devices required to provide modern and truly disruptive healthcare,” says Dr. Fabrizio Billi, director of the Musculoskeletal Devices and Technologies Development Group.

The Billi Research Lab's smart cast project will deliver real-time details about the fracture healing process, providing early warning of compartment syndrome, the lab reports.

nano3Dprint’s B3300 will be used to 3D print the smart cast's electronic package, including sensors printed directly on supports easily embeddable in the cast structure. The 3D printed circuits and sensors will allow complete integration and distribution of battery and wiring, eliminating the need for external wiring and obtrusive components. The embedded circuit will allow for the connection of a multitude of sensors where needed.

Dr. Billi added that a similar system could be made for the Ponseti brace with an electronics bar attached to—or replacing—the bar that connects the shoes. Similar electronics could be integrated into the “ribs” of an advanced scoliosis brace.

Dr. Billi and his team also hope to 3D print sensors directly on living tissues like bone, cartilage, tendons, and skin in a process already in progress . “Monitoring mechanical and physiological parameters directly on the tissue would allow our team to significantly advance our understanding of health status and tissue response to treatment,” says Dr. Billi. “More importantly, they will be able to obtain the necessary biofeedback to move from developing therapeutic devices to developing theranostic devices.”

Ramsey Stevens, nano3Dprint CEO, says the collaboration supports the company’s goals of advancing medicine through new technologies. “One of our primary objectives is to improve research and development via multi-material 3D printing that ultimately leads to improvements across many sectors,” he says.

Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

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