Baltimore-based University of Maryland Medical Center partnered with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to expand and refine its 3D-printing surgical planning program, The Baltimore Sun reports.
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A 3D printed spine implant designed at University Medical Center Utrecht in the Netherlands helped a 16-year-old boy walk again, reports Dutch News.
Salina (Kan.) Regional Health Center signed a five-year deal to become Salina-based Kansas Wesleyan University's official healthcare provider, reports KSAL.
Orthopedic surgeon James Pat Evans, MD, died aged 88 on July 22, reports Pro Rodeo.
Belfast, Northern Ireland-based axial3D raised $3 million in a funding round headed by Imprimatur Capital Fund Management to facilitate its growth into the U.S., reports 3D Printing Media Network.
The Exercise is Medicine on Campus program at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville won bronze at the American College of Sports Medicine meeting in Orlando, Fla, according to the university's website
OrthoAtlanta is the official orthopedic and sports medicine provider of the 2019 BB&T Atlanta Open.
Here are five stories featured this year on Becker's Spine Review featuring sports medicine surgeons from across the U.S.:
Alphatec commercially released its IdentiTi Large Window Porous Titanium Interbody Implant System for anterior lumbar interbody fusion procedures.
Pittsburgh-based Allegheny Health Network is collaborating with professional soccer team the Pittsburgh Riverhounds to construct a $16 million sports medicine and training facility in Coraopolis, Pa., reports KDKA Radio.
