Popular Science 09月29日
可拉伸3D打印皮肤,模拟真实触感与出血
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明尼苏达大学的研究人员开发出一种新型3D打印皮肤材料,其拉伸性和硬度可根据身体部位和运动方向进行调整,更逼真地模拟人体组织。该材料内嵌充满液体的微胶囊,切割时可模拟出血和脓液流出,为外科手术训练提供更真实的模拟。这种技术有望应用于定制合成器官,缩短医疗专业人员的培训时间,提高医疗培训的真实性和有效性,从而改善手术效果。

🔬 新型3D打印皮肤材料:该材料由明尼苏达大学的研究人员开发,能够精确模拟人体组织的自适应特性,其硬度和拉伸性可根据身体不同部位和运动方向进行调整,实现了前所未有的逼真度。

🩸 逼真的模拟效果:为了增强真实感,研究人员在打印材料中加入了充满液体的微胶囊。当皮肤被切割时,这些微胶囊会破裂并释放出模拟的血液和脓液,为外科手术训练提供了极具冲击力的感官体验。

🎓 提升医疗培训:这种高度仿真的3D打印皮肤能够显著提高外科手术训练模型的真实性。通过在触觉反馈和切割反应方面优于传统模拟皮肤,它有望缩短医疗专业人员的培训时间,并最终改善患者的治疗效果。

🌐 未来应用前景:除了作为训练模型,研究人员还设想将此项技术应用于未来定制合成器官的开发。这种按需生产的逼真替代品,不仅能加速医疗培训,还可能为器官移植提供新的解决方案。

Budding surgeons may soon train on stretchy, lifelike 3D-printed skin that oozes out blood and pus when cut. 

A new printable material developed by researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities more closely mimics the adaptive nature of human tissue. It utilizes advances in modern bioprinting to produce lifelike tissue that’s stiffness can change depending on its location on a body and in what direction it is intended to move. For added realism, the researchers incorporated fluid-filled microcapsules into the printed material to simulate the release of bodily fluids.

Researchers believe their new 3D-printed tissue could be adapted and customized in the future to help create a variety of synthetic organs. Those on-demand, realistic substitutes could potentially expedite training for healthcare professions. The advancement, detailed this week in Science Advances, is just the latest in a string of studies highlighting how creepily lifelike synthetic skins have become.  

“This approach opens the door to creating more realistic training models for surgery, which could ultimately improve medical outcomes,” University of Minnesota Department of Mechanical Engineering Ph.D graduate and paper first author Adarsh Somayaji said in a statement.

Making fake skin feel real 

Fake skin in medical settings dates back centuries. Today’s versions are typically made by casting various synthetic materials into bodily shapes. These casts are invaluable tools for teaching surgeons, but they fall short of being a true one-to-one proxy for cutting into real human skin. The University of Minnesota researchers thought modern 3D bioprinters could change that, offering a way to create more structurally accurate and patient-specific organ models.

To do that, the researchers first developed a mathematical model to predict how their printed tissue should behave in the real world. This model helped ensure the skin would accurately replicate variations in stretchiness, stiffness, and strength, depending on where it is found on the body.

A time-lapse video released by the researchers shows the bioprinter laying down layers of synthetic skin with liquid-filled capsules embedded between them. One of the researchers then took the skin (which was fitted around a mannequin’s arm) and sliced into it with a razor blade. The fake blood trapped between the layers bursts out at the incision point, replicating in gruesome detail the sensation of real bleeding.

So far, it seems like the printed skin is performing as intended. In surveys conducted after practice sessions, surgeons reported that they preferred its tactile feedback and cutting response over the conventional fake skin they typically use.

”We anticipate that these tools can help bridge the gap in realism and mechanical fidelity between tissue simulants and real human tissue, thereby improving the quality of medical training and education as well as surgical outcomes,” the researchers write. 

Researchers used a layered printing technique to create a texture that resembled the strength and stretchiness of human tissue. Image: McAlpine Research Group

We’re quickly approaching an era of printable body parts 

Simulated, synthetic skin has advanced rapidly from a sci-fi concept to real-world application in recent years. Earlier this summer, researchers from the University of Cambridge and University College London developed a new type of responsive synthetic skin made from a single hydrogel that can detect touch, pressure, heat, cold, and even damage. Eventually, researchers say that reactive skin could help humanoid robots “feel” the world around them.

Researchers from Graz University of Technology and the Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) in India are similarly developing an artificial animal skin made of 3D-printed hydrogel layers and reinforced with living human cells. Though still in the research phase, that team believes it could mimic human skin accurately enough to replace the current need for animal skin in cosmetic testing.

These advancements are happening alongside improvements in the underlying hardware used to create them. Modern bioprinters, such as one developed by researchers at the University of Melbourne, can produce multiple types of structures that mimic a wide range of tissues, from soft skin to firmer cartilage and bone.

The end goal of all of this is to both improve the types of material future professionals train on and also, one day, potentially produce ready-made organs that could be used to provide transplants for patients who need them. 

“While challenges remain in scaling up the process, we see strong potential for this 3D printing method in low-volume, high-complexity training scenarios,” Somayaji added. 

The post 3D-printed skin stretches, bleeds like the real thing appeared first on Popular Science.

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3D打印 生物打印 医疗模拟 外科手术训练 人造皮肤 AI 3D Printing Bioprinting Medical Simulation Surgical Training Artificial Skin AI
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