Assessment of 11 Available Materials With Custom Three-Dimensional-Printing Patterns for the Simulation of Muscle, Fat, and Lung Hounsfield Units in Patient-Specific Phantoms
Author(s) -
Nikiforos Okkalidis,
Chrysoula Chatzigeorgiou,
Demetrios Okkalides
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of engineering and science in medical diagnostics and therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2572-7966
pISSN - 2572-7958
DOI - 10.1115/1.4038228
Subject(s) - hounsfield scale , polylactic acid , infill , three dimensional printing , computed tomography , materials science , 3d printer , 3d printed , biomedical engineering , 3d printing , fused deposition modeling , composite material , polymer , radiology , medicine , mechanical engineering , engineering , structural engineering
A couple of fused deposition modeling (FDM) three-dimensional (3D) printers using variable infill density patterns were employed to simulate human muscle, fat, and lung tissue as it is represented by Hounsfield units (HUs) in computer tomography (CT) scans. Eleven different commercial plastic filaments were assessed by measuring their mean HU on CT images of small cubes printed with different patterns. The HU values were proportional to the mean effective density of the cubes. Polylactic acid (PLA) filaments were chosen. They had good printing characteristics and acceptable HU. Such filaments obtained from two different vendors were then tested by printing two sets of cubes comprising 10 and 6 cubes with 100% to 20% and 100% to 50% infill densities, respectively. They were printed with different printing patterns named “Regular” and “Bricks,” respectively. It was found that the HU values measured on the CT images of the 3Dprinted cubes were proportional to the infill density with slight differences between vendors and printers. The Regular pattern with infill densities of about 30%, 90%, and 100% were found to produce HUs equivalent to lung, fat, and muscle. This was confirmed with histograms of the respective region of interest (ROI). The assessment of popular 3Dprinting materials resulted in the choice of PLA, which together with the proposed technique was found suitable for the adequate simulation of the muscle, fat, and lung HU in printed patient-specific phantoms. [DOI: 10.1115/1.4038228]
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