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Using virtual reality to maintain surgical skills during periods of robotic surgery inactivity.
Guseila, Loredana M; Saranathan, Archana; Jenison, Eric L; Gil, Karen M; Elias, John J.
Affiliation
  • Guseila LM; Department of Research, Akron General Medical Center, 1 Akron General Avenue, Akron, OH, 44307, USA.
  • Saranathan A; Department of Research, Akron General Medical Center, 1 Akron General Avenue, Akron, OH, 44307, USA.
  • Jenison EL; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Akron General Medical Center, Akron, OH, USA.
  • Gil KM; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Akron General Medical Center, Akron, OH, USA.
  • Elias JJ; Department of Research, Akron General Medical Center, 1 Akron General Avenue, Akron, OH, 44307, USA. john.elias@akrongeneral.org.
J Robot Surg ; 8(3): 261-8, 2014 Sep.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27637688
ABSTRACT
Periodic practice is needed for newly trained robotic surgeons to maintain skills during periods of robotic inactivity. The current study was performed to determine whether virtual robotic skill maintenance can serve as an adequate substitute for practice on a surgical robot. Eleven surgical residents with no prior robotic training were trained to a level of robotic proficiency with inanimate models, including a needle driving pad, a running suture pad, and ring placement on a rocking peg board. After reaching proficiency, each resident was tested on a complex tissue closure task. For the next 8 weeks, the only robotic activity was biweekly virtual robotic skills maintenance. After 8 weeks, the residents performed the tissue closure task twice with the robot, followed by evaluation on the inanimate models used to reach proficiency. Repeated-measures statistical analyses were used to compare between the three tissue closure trials and between the final test at week 0 and the evaluation at week 8 for the other inanimate models. Time to complete the tissue closure task was more than 20 % lower for the second evaluation at 8 weeks than for the other two trials (p < 0.05). Residents maintained their skills for needle driving, but times for suture running and rocking peg board increased by more than 20 % at 8 weeks (p < 0.01). Virtual practice shows promise for maintaining robotic skills. Following a warm-up period, some skills may actually improve with biweekly virtual practice, but skill retention is selective, so further improvements are needed.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: J Robot Surg Year: 2014 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: J Robot Surg Year: 2014 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States