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Tortoise undergoes a makeover from Brazilian specialists | Gets new Hand Painted 3D Printed Shell

It’s time to shell-ebrate!

A ridiculously cute tortoise named Fred has been given the world’s first 3D-printed prosthetic shell, after most of her own shell was burnt in a forest fire in Brazil.
The female tortoise survived not just the blaze, but also made it through two bouts of pneumonia and not eating for 45 days.

“When we saw the animal in that state, we said ‘Wow! It looks like Freddy Krueger,’” Dr. Rodrigo Rabello, who found Fred and named her after the horror movie icon, told the Brazilian outlet, Fantastico. “It is the first prosthetic of a 3D shell of a tortoise in the world.”
Rabello is part of a Sao Paulo-based volunteer team that calls itself “Animal Avengers,” and consists of him, three other veterinarians, a 3D designer and a dental surgeon. The team decided to patch Freddy up by giving her the world’s first 3D-printed shell.

tortoise-3d-printed-shell-freddy-fb

And that was a lot harder than it sounds, seeing as Fred had lost 85 percent of her shell. So the team had to virtually reconstruct what her shell should have looked like by comparing photos

of Fred and healthy tortoises.

“It took about 40 photos [to build a model and reconstruct the shell]. We took a healthy animal, took the same 40 photos, reconstructed that animal in 3D and put it into the computer,” graphic designer Cicero Moraes told Fantastico.

Using a desktop 3D-printer, the design was printed out in four individual pieces from a corn-based plastic. “Just to make [a] single piece it took 50 hours of printing, which is much more than we imagined,” Paulo Miamoto, the dental surgeon who was part of the team, told Fantastico.

Once printed, the four pieces were assembled, like a jigsaw puzzle, on top of Fred to create a full hull. Once complete, there was just one last issue. The shell was white and didn’t look authentic, so the team asked Brazilian artist Yuri Caldera to paint the replica to make it look like the shell Fred was born with. The group conducted research to find a paint that wouldn’t wear away the carapace or cause damage to Fred’s health.

Fred now lives with Rabello and is doing well. “This is a mark in veterinary medicine,” Rodrigo told Fantastico. “From now on we will have a new age. Specially when it comes to wild animals.”

He adds: “It’s a total satisfaction, we’ll always strain to save a life, no matter whose.”

Peace-lover, creative, smart and intelligent. Prapti is a foodie, music buff and a travelholic. After leaving a top-notch full time corporate job, she now works as an Online Editor for Biotecnika. Keen on making a mark in the scientific publishing industry, she strives to find a work-life balance. Follow her for more updates!