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A New Approach to Child Hip Surgery Using 3D Printing
Thursday, June 18, 2026
The real breakthrough, though, is in how the implant affects the bone itself. It helps the bone experience more natural stress, encouraging healthier growth instead of letting it become weaker. In the tests, the new design improved bone stimulation by 25% compared to old-style plates. It also spread stress more evenly around the screw holes, where problems often start. Still, this isn’t ready for real patients yet. More testing is needed before it can be trusted.
The technology behind this idea isn’t totally new—it’s the same kind used in high-tech aerospace parts. But applying it to children’s hip surgery is a fresh direction. The challenge now is proving that this clever design can last long-term and work in real bodies, not just in computer models. If it passes those tests, it could change how surgeries like this are done for good.
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