Holly The Horse Receives 3D Printed Titanium Shoes For Christmas

Scientists have 3D printed titanium shoes for a horse with chronic foot disease.

AsianScientist (Jan. 2, 2014) – Horse vets and CSIRO scientists in Australia have given a surprise Christmas gift to ten-year-old mare, Holly, who suffers from a chronic foot disease.

Holly has spent three years suffering from a debilitating disease called laminitis. The horse’s foot is similar to our finger; the hoof wall is like our fingernail and is attached to the bone underneath. Laminitis affects the attachment between the hoof and bone, causing pain and inflammation.

Holly’s new 3D printed Christmas shoes (Photo: CSIRO)
Holly’s new 3D printed Christmas shoes (Photo: CSIRO)

On Christmas Day, she took the first steps in her new 3D printed titanium shoes that were custom designed to fit her foot. A team of 3D printing experts from CSIRO worked with horse podiatrists to scan Holly’s feet and design the titanium shoe which aims to support the foot and encourage it to heal, all while keeping Holly comfortable.

Horse vet and farrier Dr. Luke Wells-Smith said his team saw the 3D printed shoe CSIRO built for a race horse earlier this year and started to think about using 3D printing to rehabilitate lame horses.

“The new shoes will work to redistribute weight away from the painful areas of the laminitic foot and give Holly, and horses like her, the chance to recover,” he said. “Many attempts have been made in the past to cure laminitis but it’s the 3D scanning and design part of this process that is so exciting to us.”

CSIRO’s 3D printing expert John Barnes said scanning the hoof would allow them to manufacture a shoe that is the ‘perfect fit’ for these complicated foot diseases, giving the horse the best possible chance for rehabilitation.

“We know that 3D printing has the potential to create so many advanced biomedical products, but rehabilitation of horses has been a completely new area of work for CSIRO,” he said. “We’re glad that this technology is opening so many doors and is now helping to aid the rehab process for these animals and get them walking comfortably again.”

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Source: CSIRO.
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