Abstract
The treatment of paediatric supracondylar humeral fractures is likely one of the first procedures involving X-ray guided wire insertion that trainee orthopaedic surgeons will encounter. Pinning is a skill that requires high levels of anatomical knowledge, spatial awareness, and hand-eye coordination. We developed a simulation model using silicone soft-tissue and 3D-printed bones to allow development and practice of this skill at no additional risk to patients. For this model, we have focused on reusability and lowering raw-material costs without compromising fidelity.
To achieve this, the initial bone model was extracted from open-source computed tomography scans and modified from adult to paediatric size. Muscle of appropriate robustness was then sculpted around the bones using 3D modelling software. A cutaneous layer was developed to mimic oedema using clay sculpturing on a plaster-casted paediatric forearm. These models were then used for 3D-printing and silicone casting respectively. The bone models were printed with settings to imitate cortical and cancellous densities and give high-fidelity tactile feedback upon drilling. Each humerus costs NZD $0.30 in material to print and can be used 1–3 times. Silicone casting of the soft-tissue layers imitates differing relative densities between muscle and oedematous cutaneous tissue, thereby increasing skill necessary to accurately palpate landmarks. Each soft-tissue sleeve cost NZD $70 in material costs to produce and can be used 20+ times.
The resulting model is modular, reusable, and replaceable, with each component standardised and easily reproduced. It can be used to practice land-mark palpation and Kirschner wire pinning and is especially valuable in smaller centres which may not be able to afford traditional Saw Bones models. This low-cost model thereby improves equity while maintaining quality of simulation training.