With 3-D-printed models created at Case Western Reserve University’s innovation space, a veterinarian plotted a path to fix a puppy’s perplexing fracture
As a 3-month-old puppy for sale at a northeast Ohio pet store, Bento was accidentally dropped—breaking a front leg that healed crooked and weak.
Planning the puppy’s procedure
Using specialty software available at Sears think[box], Cooke and Law extracted data from Bento’s CT and MR scans and exported the images to 3-D printers, which created plastic models of Bento’s front legs.

Beyond Bento
In recent years, Cooke and Sears think[box] have also worked with surgeons at the Case Western Reserve School of Dental Medicine and University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center to produce 3-D-printed models of skulls, ankles, wrists and other anatomy for research and training residents.
For more information, contact Daniel Robison at daniel.robison@case.edu.