| Literature DB >> 27689458 |
Hamed Azarnoush1,2, Samaneh Siar2, Robin Sawaya1, Gmaan Al Zhrani1,3, Alexander Winkler-Schwartz1, Fahad Eid Alotaibi1,3, Abdulgadir Bugdadi1,4, Khalid Bajunaid1,5, Ibrahim Marwa1, Abdulrahman Jafar Sabbagh1,6,7, Rolando F Del Maestro1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Virtual reality simulators allow development of novel methods to analyze neurosurgical performance. The concept of a force pyramid is introduced as a Tier 3 metric with the ability to provide visual and spatial analysis of 3D force application by any instrument used during simulated tumor resection. This study was designed to answer 3 questions: 1) Do study groups have distinct force pyramids? 2) Do handedness and ergonomics influence force pyramid structure? 3) Are force pyramids dependent on the visual and haptic characteristics of simulated tumors? METHODS Using a virtual reality simulator, NeuroVR (formerly NeuroTouch), ultrasonic aspirator force application was continually assessed during resection of simulated brain tumors by neurosurgeons, residents, and medical students. The participants performed simulated resections of 18 simulated brain tumors with different visual and haptic characteristics. The raw data, namely, coordinates of the instrument tip as well as contact force values, were collected by the simulator. To provide a visual and qualitative spatial analysis of forces, the authors created a graph, called a force pyramid, representing force sum along the z-coordinate for different xy coordinates of the tool tip. RESULTS Sixteen neurosurgeons, 15 residents, and 84 medical students participated in the study. Neurosurgeon, resident and medical student groups displayed easily distinguishable 3D "force pyramid fingerprints." Neurosurgeons had the lowest force pyramids, indicating application of the lowest forces, followed by resident and medical student groups. Handedness, ergonomics, and visual and haptic tumor characteristics resulted in distinct well-defined 3D force pyramid patterns. CONCLUSIONS Force pyramid fingerprints provide 3D spatial assessment displays of instrument force application during simulated tumor resection. Neurosurgeon force utilization and ergonomic data form a basis for understanding and modulating resident force application and improving patient safety during tumor resection.Entities:
Keywords: NeuroTouch, NeuroVR, surgical technique; Tier 3 performance metrics; brain tumor resection; ergonomics; force pyramid; virtual reality neurosurgical simulation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27689458 DOI: 10.3171/2016.7.JNS16322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosurg ISSN: 0022-3085 Impact factor: 5.115