Ranko Mladina1, Neven Skitarelić2,3, Cemal Cingi4, Lei Chen5, Nuray Bayar Muluk6. 1. The Board of Surgical Sciences, Croatian Academy of Medical Sciences, Zagreb. 2. Department of Health Studies, University of Zadar, Zadar. 3. Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia. 4. ENT Head and Neck Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, Eskisehir, Turkey. 5. Department of Otolaryngology and Neck Surgery, Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China. 6. ENT Head and Neck Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Kirikkale University, Kirikkale, Turkey.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to better understand the usual learning curve in acquiring endonasal endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery (ESSBS) techniques during the novice training on the lamb's head model. METHODS: Ten novices were asked to perform 10 bilateral dissections on the particular lamb's head each. The dissections were uniform, consisted of 10 well-defined steps, beginning from the simple removal of the inferior turbinate, and ending with more complicated procedures like cerebrospinal fluid leak repair, Draf 3 procedure for the frontal sinus and elevation of the nasal septal flap. The dissections have been supervised by experienced surgeons. A set of standard ESSBS instruments and 0° and 45° endoscopes have been used under the navigational system. The time required to complete each step has been measured in minutes. RESULTS: In general and quite expectedly, time rates have been obviously lowering as the number of the dissections performed has been growing in each of the participants. CONCLUSION: Training of the endonasal ESSBS techniques on the lamb's head proved to be useful for novices in getting basic surgical skills in the field. Because of the high degree of anatomic similarity and high level of the anatomic dimensions congruency between the lamb's head and human head (sheep's head has bigger dimensions!) it proved to be an essential preparation for the human cadaveric dissection. The median values of the time rates having been needed to complete the particular of the 10 steps in the last novices' dissections could be accepted as an orientation, just suggesting that once the time needed to complete 1 of the 10 steps has been and achieved by the particular novice, this could be an approximate sign of the maturity for the exercises on human cadaver head.
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to better understand the usual learning curve in acquiring endonasal endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery (ESSBS) techniques during the novice training on the lamb's head model. METHODS: Ten novices were asked to perform 10 bilateral dissections on the particular lamb's head each. The dissections were uniform, consisted of 10 well-defined steps, beginning from the simple removal of the inferior turbinate, and ending with more complicated procedures like cerebrospinal fluid leak repair, Draf 3 procedure for the frontal sinus and elevation of the nasal septal flap. The dissections have been supervised by experienced surgeons. A set of standard ESSBS instruments and 0° and 45° endoscopes have been used under the navigational system. The time required to complete each step has been measured in minutes. RESULTS: In general and quite expectedly, time rates have been obviously lowering as the number of the dissections performed has been growing in each of the participants. CONCLUSION: Training of the endonasal ESSBS techniques on the lamb's head proved to be useful for novices in getting basic surgical skills in the field. Because of the high degree of anatomic similarity and high level of the anatomic dimensions congruency between the lamb's head and human head (sheep's head has bigger dimensions!) it proved to be an essential preparation for the human cadaveric dissection. The median values of the time rates having been needed to complete the particular of the 10 steps in the last novices' dissections could be accepted as an orientation, just suggesting that once the time needed to complete 1 of the 10 steps has been and achieved by the particular novice, this could be an approximate sign of the maturity for the exercises on human cadaver head.
Authors: Benjamin Philipp Ernst; Manuel René Reissig; Sebastian Strieth; Jonas Eckrich; Jan H Hagemann; Julia Döge; Christoph Matthias; Haralampos Gouveris; Johannes Rübenthaler; Roxanne Weiss; Wieland H Sommer; Dominik Nörenberg; Thomas Huber; Phillipp Gonser; Sven Becker; Matthias F Froelich Journal: PLoS One Date: 2020-11-30 Impact factor: 3.240