Berg Regan J, Inaba Kenji, Sullivan Maura, Okoye Obi, Siboni Stefano, Minneti Michael, Teixeira Pedro G, Demetriades Demetrios
Division of Trauma Surgery and Surgical Critical Care, Los Angeles County Medical Center-University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.
Division of Trauma Surgery and Surgical Critical Care, Los Angeles County Medical Center-University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.
Surgery. 2015 Jan;157(1):87-95. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2014.06.012.
Increasing ambient temperature to prevent intraoperative patient hypothermia remains widely advocated despite unconvincing evidence of efficacy. Heat stress is associated with decreased cognitive and psychomotor performance across multiple tasks but remains unexamined in an operative context. We assessed the impact of increased ambient temperature on laparoscopic operative performance and surgeon cognitive stress.
Forty-two performance measures were obtained from 21 surgery trainees participating in the counter-balanced, within-subjects study protocol. Operative performance was evaluated with adaptations of the validated, peg-transfer, and intracorporeal knot-tying tasks from the Fundamentals of Laparoscopic Surgery program. Participants trained to proficiency before enrollment. Task performance was measured at two ambient temperatures, 19 and 26°C (66 and 79°F). Participants were randomly counterbalanced to initial hot or cold exposure before crossing over to the alternate environment. Cognitive stress was measured using the validated Surgical Task Load Index (SURG-TLX).
No differences in performance of the peg-transfer and intracorporeal knot-tying tasks were seen across ambient conditions. Assessed via use of the six bipolar scales of the SURG-TLX, we found differences in task workload between the hot and cold conditions in the areas of physical demands (hot 10 [3-12], cold 5 [2.5-9], P = .013) and distractions (hot 8 [3.5-15.5], cold 3 [1.5-5.5], P = .001). Participant perception of distraction remained greater in the hot condition on full scoring of the SURG-TLX.
Increasing ambient temperature to levels advocated for prevention of intraoperative hypothermia does not greatly decrease technical performance in short operative tasks. Surgeons, however, do report increased perceptions of distraction and physical demand. The impact of these findings on performance and outcomes during longer operative procedures remains unclear.
尽管缺乏令人信服的疗效证据,但提高环境温度以预防术中患者体温过低仍被广泛提倡。热应激与多项任务中认知和心理运动表现的下降有关,但在手术环境中尚未得到研究。我们评估了环境温度升高对腹腔镜手术操作表现和外科医生认知应激的影响。
从21名参加了平衡的、受试者内研究方案的手术学员那里获得了42项表现指标。手术操作表现通过对腹腔镜手术基础课程中经过验证的移栓、体内打结任务进行改编来评估。参与者在入组前训练至熟练水平。在19和26°C(66和79°F)这两个环境温度下测量任务表现。参与者在交叉进入另一种环境之前,被随机平衡分配到初始的热暴露或冷暴露组。使用经过验证的手术任务负荷指数(SURG-TLX)测量认知应激。
在不同环境条件下,移栓和体内打结任务的表现没有差异。通过使用SURG-TLX的六个双极量表进行评估,我们发现在体力需求(热环境10[3 - 12],冷环境5[2.5 - 9],P = 0.013)和干扰(热环境8[3.5 - 15.5],冷环境3[1.5 - 5.5],P = 0.001)方面,热环境和冷环境之间的任务工作量存在差异。在对SURG-TLX进行全面评分时,参与者对干扰的感知在热环境中仍然更大。
将环境温度提高到提倡用于预防术中体温过低的水平,并不会显著降低短时间手术任务中的技术表现。然而,外科医生确实报告说干扰和体力需求的感知增加。这些发现在更长手术过程中对表现和结果的影响仍不清楚。