Hand Surgical Simulation in the Pandemic Era: A Systematic Review
Journal of the American College of Surgeons
; 236(5 Supplement 3):S75, 2023.
Artigo
em Inglês
| EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20242128
ABSTRACT
Introduction:
The COVID-19 pandemic and duty hour restrictions have illuminated a role for surgical simulation in trainees that permits meaningful technical experience outside the operating room. There is a need for the implementation of surgical simulation infrastructure adjacent to clinical training with practical considerations for complexity and cost. This systematic review analyzes surgical simulations that train hand surgical techniques and procedures with subjective or objective competency assessment. Method(s) A systematic review was conducted according to PRISMA- P guidelines using the PubMed, Medline, Scopus, Embase, Web of Science, and Cochrane databases. Selected search terms included procedures relevant to the field of hand surgery and various types of simulation training. Data, including skills and techniques taught and assessed, model type, equipment, cost, and emphasis placed in training for each article, were extracted. Result(s) Of 2,519 articles, 40 met inclusion criteria. Models were described as synthetic benchtop/3D-printed (40.0%), animal (22.5%), cadaveric (20.0%), augmented and virtual reality (AR/ VR;12.5%), and other computer simulation (12.5%). Three models incorporated both a physical benchtop component and an AR/ VR component. The procedures most represented included tendon repair (30.0%), fracture fixation (27.5%), wrist arthroscopy (15.0%), and carpal tunnel release (15.0%). Sixty-five percent of articles emphasized the importance of surgical simulation in a surgeon's training. Conclusion(s) A diversity of surgical simulation models exist for the practice of various aspects of hand surgery. The existing literature demonstrates their utility for increasing expertise with surgical techniques and procedures in a low-risk setting.
carpal tunnel release; Cochrane Library; computer simulation; conference abstract; Embase; fracture fixation; hand surgery; human; Medline; pandemic; physical model; practice guideline; Scopus; simulation; simulation training; skill; surgeon; surgery; surgical technique; systematic review; tendon reconstruction; virtual reality; Web of Science; wrist arthroscopy
Texto completo:
Disponível
Coleções:
Bases de dados de organismos internacionais
Base de dados:
EMBASE
Tipo de estudo:
Estudo prognóstico
/
Revisões
/
Revisão sistemática/Meta-análise
Idioma:
Inglês
Revista:
Journal of the American College of Surgeons
Ano de publicação:
2023
Tipo de documento:
Artigo
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