Computer-designed prostheses for orbitocranial reconstruction.

Plast Reconstr Surg

Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Pacific Presbyterian Medical Center, San Francisco, Calif.

Published: March 1988

Three-dimensional imaging is an adjunct to preoperative evaluation and surgical management in some patients with complex anatomic defects of various etiologies. Deformities defined by conventional computerized tomography can be viewed as accurate three-dimensional images calculated from the original scan. The images are viewed on a high-resolution video monitor and can be photographed for a permanent record. A computer-controlled milling device can use these data to fabricate prostheses. The prostheses aid reconstructive surgery through use as an alloplastic implant, as a template to fashion autogenous bone grafts, or as a model for tissue removal. We have utilized three-dimensional imaging in combination with computer-assisted prosthesis manufacture in six patients with complex orbitocranial deformities. Four patients have undergone reconstructive surgery with satisfactory results and no complications thus far. The use of computer-designed prostheses adds a new aspect to orbitocranial reconstructive surgery that facilitates increased accuracy in the correction of anatomic defects.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00006534-198803000-00001DOI Listing

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