Digital Anatomy Creator lets designers push the boundaries of functional medical models

Stratasys Ltd. continues to enhance anatomic modeling solutions for healthcare providers through the introduction of a new software module, Digital Anatomy Creator, for Stratasys Digital Anatomy 3D Printers. The new software allows users to easily manipulate material formations and customize the internal structures of their prints to achieve patient-specific anatomic models that are a direct replication of a patient’s pathologic and biologic anatomy.

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Stratasys Digital Anatomy printers can produce medical models across a spectrum of applications, from diagnosis to patient education. With the Digital Anatomy Creator users have access to additional options and controls to calibrate their printers’ materials to meet specific anatomic model needs, allowing them to explore, customize and create ultra-realistic models that behave and respond like the real thing. Further, Digital Anatomy Creator allows users to create, replicate and share designs across a community for patient-specific anatomies.

Healthcare providers are under increasing pressure to provide a more personalized level of care and ensure better outcomes of surgical procedures, all while lowering costs and reducing time spent in the operating suite. By incorporating 3D printed anatomic models into their practice, providers can deliver patient- and pathology-specific anatomic models printed with materials that can mimic human tissue, enabling healthcare providers to use the anatomic models for diagnostic purposes, to develop hyper-personalized treatment plans, and to better prepare for surgical procedures.

In addition to the introduction of the Digital Anatomy Creator, Stratasys continues to advance personalized healthcare by collaborating with Synopsys Simpleware ScanIP Medical and Materialise Mimics inPrint to certify its Digital Anatomy and J5 MediJet printers to be included in FDA 510(k) cleared medical modeling workflows. These certifications give Stratasys’ customers access to workflows for diagnostic anatomic modeling and further enhances access to point-of-care 3D printing.

Attendees at the RSNA conference at McCormick Place in Chicago Nov. 28 – Dec. 2 can see Stratasys Digital Anatomy solutions in the 3D Printing and Mixed Reality Showcase located in the North Hall Level 3 – booth 8302.

Stratasys
www.stratasys.com/medical

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