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Motion analysis for better understanding of psychomotor skills in laparoscopy : objective assessment-based simulation training using animal organs

Authors :
Ebina, Koki
1000010399842
Abe, Takashige
Higuchi, Madoka
Furumido, Jun
Iwahara, Naoya
1000040802799
Kon, Masafumi
1000090443936
Hotta, Kiyohiko
1000040708004
Komizunai, Shunsuke
1000040374350
Kurashima, Yo
1000020828305
Kikuchi, Hiroshi
1000010762536
Matsumoto, Ryuji
1000060374443
Osawa, Takahiro
Murai, Sachiyo
Tsujita, Teppei
Sase, Kazuya
Chen, Xiaoshuai
1000090250688
Konno, Atsushi
1000090250422
Shinohara, Nobuo
Ebina, Koki
1000010399842
Abe, Takashige
Higuchi, Madoka
Furumido, Jun
Iwahara, Naoya
1000040802799
Kon, Masafumi
1000090443936
Hotta, Kiyohiko
1000040708004
Komizunai, Shunsuke
1000040374350
Kurashima, Yo
1000020828305
Kikuchi, Hiroshi
1000010762536
Matsumoto, Ryuji
1000060374443
Osawa, Takahiro
Murai, Sachiyo
Tsujita, Teppei
Sase, Kazuya
Chen, Xiaoshuai
1000090250688
Konno, Atsushi
1000090250422
Shinohara, Nobuo
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Our aim was to characterize the motions of multiple laparoscopic surgical instruments among participants with different levels of surgical experience in a series of wet-lab training drills, in which participants need to perform a range of surgical procedures including grasping tissue, tissue traction and dissection, applying a Hem-o-lok clip, and suturing/knotting, and digitize the level of surgical competency. Methods Participants performed tissue dissection around the aorta, dividing encountered vessels after applying a Hem-o-lok (Task 1), and renal parenchymal closure (Task 2: suturing, Task 3: suturing and knot-tying), using swine cadaveric organs placed in a box trainer under a motion capture (Mocap) system. Motion-related metrics were compared according to participants' level of surgical experience (experts: 50 <= laparoscopic surgeries, intermediates: 10-49, novices: 0-9), using the Kruskal-Wallis test, and significant metrics were subjected to principal component analysis (PCA). Results A total of 15 experts, 12 intermediates, and 18 novices participated in the training. In Task 1, a shorter path length and faster velocity/acceleration/jerk were observed using both scissors and a Hem-o-lok applier in the experts, and Hem-o-lok-related metrics markedly contributed to the 1st principal component on PCA analysis, followed by scissors-related metrics. Higher-level skills including a shorter path length and faster velocity were observed in both hands of the experts also in tasks 2 and 3. Sub-analysis showed that, in experts with 100 <= cases, scissors moved more frequently in the "close zone (0 <= to < 2.0 cm from aorta)" than those with 50-99 cases. Conclusion Our novel Mocap system recognized significant differences in several metrics in multiple instruments according to the level of surgical experience. "Applying a Hem-o-lok clip on a pedicle" strongly reflected the level of surgical experience, and zone-metrics may be a promising tool t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1375197477
Document Type :
Electronic Resource