How 3D Printers Are Changing Airway Care
Medical centers across the country are investing in 3D printers as educational tools for their...
Medical centers across the country are investing in 3D printers as educational tools for their...
Medical centers across the country are investing in 3D printers as educational tools for their...
Read MoreIn RT’s August-September 2022 issue, we cover everything RTs need to know about exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (EIB) and exercise-induced asthma (EIA); how ventilatory support changed during the COVID-19 pandemic; how 3D printers are changing airway management; and successful pediatric intubation.
Read MoreA medical team has used 3D printing and virtual reality to produce an exact model of the airway of a 7-year-old girl in order to prepare for an operation to remove part of her lung.
Read MoreResearchers have developed a 3-D printed baby mannikin, based on an MRI scan of a real newborn baby, which could improve the resuscitation training.
Read MoreOventus Medical has unveiled its flagship medical device, the O2Vent, for the treatment of snoring and sleep apnea.
Read MoreThe University of Michigan Health System has created a customized CPAP mask designed to improve breathing efficiency by utilizing 3D printing technology.
Read MoreA 3-D printed windpipe helped a 2-year-old child with a defective windpipe breathe comfortably.
Read MoreA 3-D laboratory method has been developed to test asthma and allergy medications that could reduce the need to test the drugs on animals.
Read MoreTracheal splints created using 3-D printing have successfully improved the lung function of an 18-month-old boy with severe tracheobronchomalacia, making him the second child whose life has been saved by the technology developed by University of Michigan doctors.
Read MoreAn infant with tracheobronchomalacia was successfully treated with a customized, bioresorbable tracheal splint created using three-dimensional printing.
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