A small heart with a big problem
Imagine a child born with a heart that wasn't wired correctly from the start. To fix it, surgeons placed a tube — called a conduit — to connect the right side of the heart to the lungs.
That tube works. But as the child grows, the tube doesn't. It narrows. It clogs. It needs to be opened or replaced.
The next step is often a delicate procedure where doctors thread a balloon or metal stent inside the tube to prop it open.
The hidden danger just millimeters away
Here's the problem. The heart's own blood vessels — the coronary arteries — sit very close to that conduit.
If the balloon or stent pushes too hard on the outside, it can squeeze one of those arteries shut. That can cause a life-threatening heart attack right on the table.
Doctors call this "coronary compression." It's one of the scariest risks in pediatric cardiology.
The old way, and the twist
Until now, the standard approach used two flat tools. A CT scan for the anatomy and a test balloon puffed up inside the conduit during the procedure.
Surgeons eyed the scan, puffed the balloon, watched the coronary arteries on live X-ray, and hoped their guess about spacing was right.
But flat images can fool even expert eyes. A 3D heart is hard to judge from a 2D slice.
Here's the twist. Researchers at two Israeli medical centers tried something new. They fed each child's CT scan into a 3D modeling program, then loaded that model into a virtual reality headset.
Walking inside a child's heart
Think of it like Google Earth for a patient's anatomy.
Instead of flying over a city from above, the doctor zooms into a life-sized 3D version of the child's chest. They can turn their head to look at the conduit from the side. They can move closer to see how far a coronary artery sits from the wall of the tube.
They can even simulate the balloon inflating and watch, in 3D, how close that artery comes to being squished.
That's something a flat screen simply cannot offer.
The study in plain terms
The researchers looked back at 19 pediatric patients who needed evaluation for conduit dilation and stenting between 2018 and 2022.
For each child, they built a custom 3D virtual reality model from the CT scan. Two cardiologists then put on VR headsets and measured the distance between the conduit and the coronary arteries, both before and after a simulated balloon expansion.
They also rated how useful the VR was compared to plain CT images.
The two doctors agreed strongly with each other on the VR measurements. That matters — if two experts see the same thing in the same model, the tool is reliable.
Both cardiologists rated the VR experience significantly better than CT alone for spotting how coronary arteries traveled and where they might get pinched. On their usability scale, VR scored 4.58 out of 5. CT alone got 3.78.
That's a meaningful gap coming from specialists who review heart scans every day.
This is where it gets interesting
The goal isn't fancier technology — it's fewer emergencies during surgery.
If a doctor can see in VR that a coronary artery sits dangerously close to the conduit wall, they can change the plan before the child ever enters the procedure room. They might pick a different stent size. Or skip the stent entirely and do open surgery instead.
A better plan before the procedure means fewer surprises during it.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
VR and 3D printing have been creeping into medicine for a decade. Neurosurgeons, orthopedic surgeons, and plastic surgeons have used these tools to rehearse complicated cases.
Pediatric heart care has been slower to adopt VR, partly because every child's heart defect is unique. Building a custom model takes time and specialized software.
This study suggests the effort is worth it for high-risk cases like these.
If your child has a congenital heart defect and needs a conduit procedure, VR planning is not yet standard care.
A handful of top pediatric heart centers in the US, Europe, and Israel are starting to offer it. Ask your pediatric cardiologist whether 3D or VR modeling is part of the pre-procedure plan at your hospital.
Even without VR, many centers now build 3D-printed models for complex cases. That's a simpler cousin of the same idea.
The honest limits
Only 19 patients were studied, and they came from just two hospitals.
The researchers didn't compare VR planning to actual procedure results in a head-to-head trial. So we don't yet know whether VR planning leads to fewer complications in real surgery.
VR setup also takes specialized software, staff trained to use it, and time — resources many hospitals don't have.
Bigger studies will need to link VR planning to real outcomes. Did children whose cases were planned in VR have fewer coronary injuries? Shorter procedures? Better long-term heart function?
As VR headsets get cheaper and software gets easier, more pediatric heart programs will likely adopt this kind of planning — especially for the trickiest cases.
For now, it's a promising tool in a small set of expert hands.