Department for Visceral, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery at the University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Technische Universität Dresden and Cluster of Excellence "Centre for Tactile Internet with Human-in-the-Loop" (CeTI) of Technische Universität Dresden, Germany.
Department for Visceral, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery at the University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany.
Int J Surg. 2022 Aug;104:106813. doi: 10.1016/j.ijsu.2022.106813. Epub 2022 Aug 7.
Time pressure can cause stress, subsequently influencing surgeons during minimally invasive procedures. This trial aimed to investigate the effect of time pressure on surgical quality, as assessed by force application and errors during minimally invasive surgical tasks.
Sixty-three participants (43 surgical novices trained to proficiency and 20 surgeons) performed four laparoscopic tasks (PEG transfer, precise Cutting, balloon resection, surgical knot) both with and without time pressure. The primary endpoint was the mean and maximal force exertion during each task. Secondary endpoints were the occurrence of predefined errors and the self-assessed stress level.
Time pressure led to a significant shortening of the task time in all four tasks. However, significantly more errors were noticed under time pressure in one task (suture precision P < 0.001). Moreover, time pressure led to a significant increase in mean force in all tasks (PEG: P < 0.001; precision cutting: P = 0.001; surgical knot: P < 0.001; balloon: P = 0.004). In three tasks the maximal force application (PEG: P < 0.001; precision cutting: P < 0.001; surgical knot: P = 0.006) increased significantly. Performing the tasks under time pressure significantly increased the stress level. Cohort analysis revealed that time pressure impaired the performance of both, surgical novices and surgeons but novices were more strongly affected compared to surgeons.
Time pressure during minimally invasive surgery may improve procedural time but impair the quality of surgical performance in terms of the incidence of errors and force exertion. Experience may only partially compensate for the negative influence of time pressure.
时间压力会导致压力,进而影响微创手术中的外科医生。本试验旨在研究时间压力对手术质量的影响,评估指标为微创外科任务中力的应用和误差。
63 名参与者(43 名受过训练的手术新手和 20 名外科医生)在有时间压力和无时间压力的情况下分别完成了四项腹腔镜任务(PEG 转移、精确切割、气球切除、手术结)。主要终点是每个任务的平均和最大力。次要终点是预定义错误的发生和自我评估的压力水平。
时间压力导致所有四项任务的任务时间显著缩短。然而,在一项任务(缝线精度,P<0.001)中,有时间压力时明显会出现更多的错误。此外,时间压力导致所有任务的平均力显著增加(PEG:P<0.001;精确切割:P=0.001;手术结:P<0.001;气球:P=0.004)。在三项任务中,最大力应用(PEG:P<0.001;精确切割:P<0.001;手术结:P=0.006)显著增加。在有时间压力的情况下完成任务会显著增加压力水平。队列分析显示,时间压力会损害新手和外科医生的手术表现,但新手的影响比外科医生更大。
微创外科手术中的时间压力可能会缩短手术时间,但会降低手术表现的质量,表现为错误发生率和力的应用增加。经验只能部分补偿时间压力的负面影响。