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Aussie infant to be fitted with 3D printed ear

Researchers at QUT are hoping to create prosthetic ears using 3D printers. AAP I

Researchers at QUT are hoping to create prosthetic ears using 3D printers. AAP I

Toddler Maia Van Mulligan was born with just one ear, but thanks to world-first Queensland research she could soon be fitted with a 3D printed one.

The Queensland University of Technology has received $125,000 in state government and not-for-profit funding to develop prosthetic ears that mimic cartilage tissue.

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Researchers believe the products are a world first and the ears could be available to buy in the next one or two years.

QUT Associate Professor Mia Woodruff said although the project was in its infancy, she was confident that with commercial and government support, the prosthetic ears could eventually be sold for less than a pair of glasses.

The QUT research team is also working on a long-term project, to create an anatomically correct ear that would be 3D printed using the child’s own cartilage cells.

prosthetic ears printer

Researchers at QUT are hoping to create prosthetic ears using 3D printers. AAP

It was made possible through $45,000 in state government funding, announced by Science Minister Leeanne Enoch on Saturday morning.

The money has been used to hire a PhD researcher and is the first to be announced as part of the government’s Advance Queensland initiative.

Assoc Prof Woodruff said the ear would be surgically implanted on to the child and it would grow to create a “living, breathing ear construct”.

The researchers hope to then work with bionics companies to improve the child’s hearing.

At two-and-a-half years of age, Maia Van Mulligan doesn’t know that she was born with only one ear.

Mother Chloe Mulligan said the research would change her daughter’s life.

“I thought it was light years away in terms of this technology,” she said.

“It’s not just about the hearing loss, it is about being socially accepted in society.

“For us the day she comes to us and actually says, `Where’s my ear’, it’s obviously going to be heartbreaking.

“But now we can say, `You will have an ear’.”

QUT is working in partnership with the Hear and Say charity, who contributed $25,000 to the ear research.

If successful, the 3D printer could be used to print other parts of the body and assist soldiers who have been injured while on deployment.

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