Off the wire
Copa Libertadores: Defending champions Atletico Nacional ousted  • Mexico City faces worst air pollution in two decades  • Eating fruit, vegetables secret to looking good: Australian study  • Interview: Slovenia wishes to become major logistic hub of Belt and Road Initiative, says minister  • Xinhua China news advisory -- May 19  • Gold price opens lower in Hong Kong  • Melbourne has longest yet slowest tram network in the world: study  • China treasury bond futures open lower Friday  • Hong Kong stocks open 0.14 pct higher  • Chinese football has bright future, says FIFA official Zhang Jian  
You are here:   Home/ News

Chinese hospital uses 4D printing to reconstruct breast

Xinhua, June 7, 2017 Adjust font size:

A Chinese hospital announced on Tuesday that doctors have recreated a breast for a cancer patient using 4D printing.

The surgery was performed on August 8, 2016, and the printed breast has grown well with the patient's own tissue, said Ling Rui, a vascular surgery doctor with Xijing Hospital of the Fourth Military Medical University in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province.

The patient underwent a mastectomy for her left breast last year, before having the surgery.

"Compared with three-dimensional printing, 4D printing adds time as another dimension," said Ling.

Doctors collected data on the size of her tumor and original breast, and reconstructed a bio-degradable breast.

The implant was developed by the hospital with a national lab of Xi'an Jiaotong University.

"It is sufficiently strong, and will degrade in designed period of time, which is in the patient's case one to two years," said Zhang Juliang, an assistant professor in Xijing Hospital who participated in the surgery.

Its porous nature allows human tissue to grow into the implant and ultimately replace it, Zhang said.

"In the ten months since the surgery, the implant has grown well, and the patient's veins and tissue have started to grow back," Ling said.

Compared to existing methods of breast reconstruction, the method has fewer side-effects, Ling said.