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Gypsum on 3d printer

Thanks to this innovative idea of ​​exoskeleton plaster, printed by a 3D printer and having an original design, you no longer have to suffer, not knowing how to scratch an itchy hand under a plaster, or to balance standing on one foot in the shower, so as not to wet the plastered other. A graduate of the Department of Architecture and Design at Wellington University, Victoria Jake Evill (Jake Evill) has developed this unique gypsum, called Cortex.

According to Evillus, exoskeleton gypsum provides complete fixation and protection of broken bone, is well ventilated, simply processed, friendly with water, and besides that it is also light. “After many centuries of tires and bulky gypsums that were the itchy and smelly scourge of millions of children and adults around the world, we finally raised fracture fixtures to the level of the 21st century,” Evill comments on her brainchild.

To create a gypsum, the patient is scanned with an x-ray, a fracture is found, then the fracture zone undergoes a 3D scan and the data is loaded into a computer that simulates the gypsum, which, in turn, is then printed by a 3D printer. The final product has one opening side, which is subsequently fixed with strong fasteners.
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Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/185562/


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