Sajadi Karima, Crosby Leslie, Yu Melissa, Longenbach James, Welch Kevin Conor, Cooper Maxwell
Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Department of Emergency Medicine, Ultrasound Division, Crozer-Chester Medical Center, Upland, Pennsylvania.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Ultrasound Division, Crozer-Chester Medical Center, Upland, Pennsylvania.
J Emerg Med. 2022 Apr;62(4):500-507. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2022.01.003. Epub 2022 Mar 9.
Various commercially available and do-it-yourself (DIY) models are used to teach emergency medicine (EM) residents and medical students ultrasound (US)-guided i.v. insertion. Expensive commercial models degrade over time, but DIY models are inexpensive, easily prepared, and readily discarded.
We tested the hypothesis that DIY models are equally effective as commercial models for teaching US-guided i.v. insertion, and using a controlled trial to subjectively evaluate how well DIY models and commercially manufactured models compare with human tissue both tactilely and sonographically.
We tested three models for US-guided i.v. teaching-a commercially available model US training block model, a homemade tofu model, and a homemade gelatin model. All three models were compared with US-guided i.v. insertion involving human tissue. Study participants were EM residents and EM attendings experienced in US-guided i.v. placement in real patients. After practicing peripheral i.v. placement under US guidance using the three media, participants at various levels of training and experience with US-guided i.v. insertion subjectively described how each media compared tactilely and sonographically, which model was most similar to a live human overall, and which model was best for instructing learners.
The overall score (sum of visual and sonographic scores) for the gelatin model was significantly higher than either of the other models, indicating that the gelatin model was evaluated as most approximate to the anatomy of a human compared with the other models.
Inexpensive homemade alternatives to commercial simulators can be realistic and effective surrogates for learning US-guided peripheral i.v.
各种市售和自制(DIY)模型被用于教授急诊医学(EM)住院医师和医学生超声(US)引导下的静脉穿刺。昂贵的商业模型会随着时间推移而损坏,但DIY模型价格低廉、易于制作且可随时丢弃。
我们检验了以下假设,即DIY模型在教授US引导下的静脉穿刺方面与商业模型同样有效,并通过一项对照试验主观评估DIY模型和商业制造模型在触觉和超声成像方面与人体组织的比较情况。
我们测试了三种用于US引导下静脉穿刺教学的模型——一种市售的US训练模块模型、一种自制豆腐模型和一种自制明胶模型。将这三种模型与涉及人体组织的US引导下静脉穿刺进行比较。研究参与者为有在真实患者中进行US引导下静脉穿刺经验的EM住院医师和EM主治医生。在使用这三种介质在US引导下进行外周静脉穿刺练习后,不同训练水平和US引导下静脉穿刺经验的参与者主观描述了每种介质在触觉和超声成像方面的比较情况、哪种模型总体上最类似于真人以及哪种模型最适合指导学习者。
明胶模型的总体评分(视觉和超声评分之和)显著高于其他两种模型,表明与其他模型相比,明胶模型被评估为最接近人体解剖结构。
商业模拟器的廉价自制替代品对于学习US引导下外周静脉穿刺可以是现实且有效的替代物。