Madan Atul K, Frantzides Constantine T, Shervin Nina, Tebbit Christopher L
Department of Surgery, University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
Am Surg. 2003 Dec;69(12):1112-4.
Training residents in laparoscopic skills is ideally initiated in an inanimate laboratory with both box trainers and virtual reality trainers. Virtual reality trainers have the ability to score individual hand performance although they are expensive. Here we compared the ability to assess dominant and nondominant hand performance in box trainers with virtual reality trainers. Medical students without laparoscopic experience were utilized in this study (n = 16). Each student performed tasks on the LTS 2000, an inanimate box trainer (placing pegs with both hands and transferring pegs from one hand to another), as well as a task on the MIST-VR, a virtual reality trainer (grasping a virtual object and placing it in a virtual receptable with alternating hands). A surgeon scored students for the inanimate box trainer exercises (time and errors) while the MIST-VR scored students (time, economy of movements, and errors for each hand). Statistical analysis included Pearson correlations. Errors and time for the one-handed tasks on the box trainer did not correlate with errors, time, or economy measured for each hand by the MIST-VR (r = 0.01 to 0.30; P = NS). Total errors on the virtual reality trainer did correlate with errors on transferring pege (r = 0.61; P < 0.05). Economy and time of both dominant and nondominant hand from the MIST-VR correlated with time of transferring pegs in the box trainer (r = 0.53 to 0.77; P < 0.05). While individual hand assessment by the box trainer during 2-handed tasks was related to assessment by the virtual reality trainer, individual hand assessment during 1-handed tasks did not correlate with the virtual reality trainer. Virtual reality trainers, such as the MIST-VR, allow assessment of individual hand skills which may lead to improved laparoscopic skill acquisition. It is difficult to assess individual hand performance with box trainers alone.
住院医师腹腔镜技能培训最好在无生命的实验室中开始,使用箱式训练器和虚拟现实训练器。虚拟现实训练器能够对个人手部操作进行评分,不过它们价格昂贵。在此,我们比较了箱式训练器和虚拟现实训练器评估优势手和非优势手操作的能力。本研究纳入了没有腹腔镜经验的医学生(n = 16)。每位学生在LTS 2000(一种无生命的箱式训练器,双手放置钉子并将钉子从一只手转移到另一只手)以及MIST-VR(一种虚拟现实训练器,交替用手抓取虚拟物体并将其放入虚拟容器中)上执行任务。一名外科医生对学生在无生命箱式训练器练习中的表现(时间和错误情况)进行评分,而MIST-VR对学生进行评分(时间、动作经济性以及每只手的错误情况)。统计分析包括Pearson相关性分析。箱式训练器上单手任务的错误和时间与MIST-VR测量的每只手的错误、时间或经济性均无相关性(r = 0.01至0.30;P = 无显著性差异)。虚拟现实训练器上的总错误与转移钉子时的错误相关(r = 0.61;P < 0.05)。MIST-VR上优势手和非优势手的经济性和时间与箱式训练器中转移钉子的时间相关(r = 0.53至0.77;P < 0.05)。虽然箱式训练器在双手任务中对单个手的评估与虚拟现实训练器的评估相关,但单手任务中单个手的评估与虚拟现实训练器不相关。诸如MIST-VR这样的虚拟现实训练器能够评估单个手的技能,这可能有助于提高腹腔镜技能的习得。仅使用箱式训练器很难评估单个手的操作表现。