| Literature DB >> 30350756 |
Thomas M Gregory1,2, Jules Gregory3, John Sledge4, Romain Allard1, Olivier Mir2,5.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30350756 PMCID: PMC6202760 DOI: 10.1080/17453674.2018.1506974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Orthop ISSN: 1745-3674 Impact factor: 3.717
Figure 1.Outside view of the headset during the surgical procedure.
Figure 2.View from the headset during the surgical procedure.
Figure 3.Postoperative CT scan of the glenoid (top left: sagittal view; bottom left: coronal view; right: axial view).
Current published data on AR in surgery
| Study | Outcomes | Main findings |
|---|---|---|
| Vávra et al. | Review of the literature: augmented reality can presently improve the results of surgical procedures? | |
| – AR is an effective tool for training and skill assessment of surgery residents, other medical staff, or students | ||
| – The interest of surgeons is increasing | ||
| – The performance is comparable to traditional techniques | ||
| – The time required for completing a procedure has been reduced while using any form of AR | ||
| – Inattentional blindness: the surgeon does not see an unexpected object which suddenly appears in his field of view | ||
| – The amount of information is increasing and may be distracting | ||
| – The latency of the whole system is also of concern | ||
| – Long-term wear comfort is an issue | ||
| – AR projections produce simulator sickness | ||
| Sinkin et al. | Ease of use | |
| – Average ease of image capture =3.11/5 | ||
| Quality of images | ||
| – Average ease of video capture =3.22/5 | ||
| Gaze disruption | ||
| – Average ease of using the wink feature =1.89 | ||
| Distraction | ||
| – Quality of image and video =3.89 and 3.67/7 | ||
| Comfort and satisfaction to wear: Average for comfort =4.56/7, Average for satisfaction =3.78/7 | ||
| – 33% of users felt the device to be a distraction from the case | ||
| Pulijala et al. 2017 | Self-assessment scores of trainee confidence before and after the intervention. Novice surgical residents | |
| – The study group participants showed greater perceived self-confidence levels | ||
| Opolski et al. | Operators’ satisfaction assessed by a 5-point Likert scale | |
| – The voice-activated co-registration and review of images were feasible and highly rated by operators (4.7/5 points) | ||
| – There were no major adverse events | ||
| – More frequent selection of the first-choice stiff wire and lower contrast exposure | ||
| – Success rates and safety outcomes remained similar between the two groups | ||
| Muensterer et al. | AR Glass was worn daily for 4 weeks to identify and evaluate daily activities with potential applicability | |
| – Wearing Glass throughout the day was well tolerated | ||
| – Colleagues, staff, families, and patients overwhelmingly had a positive response to Glass | ||
| – Low battery endurance | ||
| – Poor overall audio quality | ||
| – Long transmission latency combined with interruptions and cut-offs during internet videoconferencing | ||
| Léger et al. | Time taken to perform the task. Attention shifts: | |
| – There were significant reductions in terms of the time taken to perform the task, and attention shifts | ||
| Feelings about accuracy, intuition, comfort, perceived cognitive load | ||
| – Users felt that the system was easier to use and that their performance was better |