<item>
  <date>2014-03-27</date>
  <hash>9be61d0e34d9199a4ad227e45558290a3f764ae1</hash>
  <images></images>
  <index>16</index>
  <keywords>
    <name>Anatomics</name>
    <index>36</index>
    <slug>/wiki/anatomics</slug>
  </keywords>
  <keywords>
    <name>University Medical Center Utrecht</name>
    <index>1</index>
    <slug>/wiki/university%20medical%20center%20utrecht</slug>
  </keywords>
  <keywords>
    <name>Utrecht, Netherlands</name>
    <index>13</index>
    <slug>/wiki/utrecht,%20netherlands</slug>
  </keywords>
  <keywords_list>Anatomics</keywords_list>
  <keywords_list>University Medical Center Utrecht</keywords_list>
  <keywords_list>Utrecht, Netherlands</keywords_list>
  <keywords_main>University Medical Center Utrecht</keywords_main>
  <slug>/feed/2014/03/27/it-is-announced-publicly-that-three-months-ago-doctors-at-the-university-medical-center-utrecht-in-utrecht-netherlan</slug>
  <sources>
    <name>NBC</name>
    <day>27</day>
    <hash>6b229d05bf2a5c7ce4a78506d95f5405f4f9b425</hash>
    <month>3</month>
    <permalink>http://www.nbcnews.com/science/science-news/medical-first-3-d-printed-skull-successfully-implanted-woman-n65576</permalink>
    <year>2014</year>
  </sources>
  <text>It is announced publicly that, three months ago, doctors at the University Medical Center Utrecht, in Utrecht, Netherlands, successfully implanted a 3-D printed skull (most of it), from Australian company Anatomics, in a medical first, into an unnamed female patient. </text>
</item>
