Annals of 3D Printed Medicine (Feb 2023)

3D printing for respiratory physiotherapy: a tale of three disciplines

  • Laura K. Daly,
  • Julian W.M. de Looze,
  • David P. Forrestal,
  • Michael Wagels,
  • Ann-Louise Spurgin,
  • Juliet D. Hoey,
  • Michael R. Holt,
  • Sarju Vasani,
  • Mathilde R. Desselle

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. 100096

Abstract

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A 78-year-old patient with a laryngectomy and a background of bronchiectasis experienced frequent hospital admissions due to pulmonary exacerbations. Standard care would be to trial a positive expiratory pressure (PEP) device to assist with secretion removal, however, no adaptor could be found to contour the patient's tracheostoma. A 3D printed patient-specific PEP adaptor was created, facilitating regular secretion clearance via PEP therapy. Frequency of hospital admissions and outcomes of disease-specific questionnaires (St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and Leicester Cough Questionnaire (LCQ)) were evaluated at three and six months. After six months of device use, the patient had not experienced a pulmonary exacerbation or required an admission, whilst demonstrating clinically significant improvements in both SGRQ (58.98 vs. 66.3/100) and LCQ (11.27 vs. 13.27/21) scores. Collaboration between consumers, clinicians and engineers can support the delivery of personalised healthcare and improve quality of life for patients with pulmonary conditions.

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