Literature DB >> 31569139

A Prospective Analysis of Motor and Cognitive Skill Retention in Novice Learners of Point of Care Ultrasound.

Charles A Rappaport1, Bryan C McConomy2, Nicholas R Arnold2, Aaron T Vose2, Gregory A Schmidt1, Boulos Nassar1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To identify the time at which point of care ultrasound static image recognition and image acquisition skills decay in novice learners.
SETTING: The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics.
SUBJECTS: Twenty-four subjects (23 first-year medical students and one first-year physician assistant student).
DESIGN: The subjects completed an initial didactic and hands-on session with immediate testing of learned image acquisition and static image identification skills.
INTERVENTIONS: Retesting occurred at 1, 4, and 8 weeks after the initial training session with no retraining in between. Image acquisition skills were obtained on the same healthy male volunteers, and the students were given no immediate feedback on their performance. The image identification skills were assessed with a 10 question test at each follow-up session.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: For pleural ultrasound by 4 weeks, there was a significant decline of the ability to identify A-lines (p = 0.0065). For pleural image acquisition, there was no significant decline in the ability to demonstrate lung sliding. Conversely, cardiac image recognition did not significantly decline throughout the study, while the ability to demonstrate cardiac images at 4 weeks (parasternal short axis view) did (p = 0.0008).
CONCLUSIONS: Motor and cognitive skills decay at different times for pleural and cardiac images. Future ultrasound curricula should retrain skills at a maximum of 8 weeks from initial training. They should focus more on didactic sessions related to image identification for pleural images, and more hands-on image acquisition training for cardiac images, which represents a novel finding.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31569139     DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000004002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  6 in total

1.  Point-of-Care Ultrasound Training during Nephrology Fellowship: A National Survey of Fellows and Program Directors.

Authors:  Catherine A Moore; Daniel W Ross; Kurtis A Pivert; Valerie J Lang; Stephen M Sozio; W Charles O'Neill
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2022-09-21       Impact factor: 10.614

2.  Use of Hand-motion Analysis to Assess Competence and Skill Decay for Cardiac and Lung Point-of-care Ultrasound.

Authors:  Daniel J Ackil; Amanda Toney; Ryan Good; David Ross; Rocco Germano; Linda Sabbadini; Molly Thiessen; Colin Bell; John L Kendall
Journal:  AEM Educ Train       Date:  2020-12-15

3.  Evaluating a longitudinal point-of-care-ultrasound (POCUS) curriculum for pediatric residents.

Authors:  Julia Aogaichi Brant; Jonathan Orsborn; Ryan Good; Emily Greenwald; Megan Mickley; Amanda G Toney
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2021-01-19       Impact factor: 2.463

4.  Point-of-Care Ultrasound: A Case Series of Potential Pitfalls.

Authors:  Ghislaine Douflé; Ricardo Teijeiro-Paradis; Diana Morales-Castro; Martin Urner; Alberto Goffi; Laura Dragoi; Filio Billia
Journal:  CASE (Phila)       Date:  2022-08-15

5.  Medical student medium-term skill retention following cardiac point-of-care ultrasound training based on the American Society of Echocardiography curriculum framework.

Authors:  Satoshi Jujo; Brandan I Sakka; Jannet J Lee-Jayaram; Akihisa Kataoka; Masaki Izumo; Kenya Kusunose; Atsushi Nakahira; Sayaka Oikawa; Yuki Kataoka; Benjamin W Berg
Journal:  Cardiovasc Ultrasound       Date:  2022-10-12       Impact factor: 2.263

6.  A Prospective Study of Optic Nerve Ultrasound for the Detection of Elevated Intracranial Pressure in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury.

Authors:  Deepak Agrawal; Krishnan Raghavendran; Lili Zhao; Venkatakrishna Rajajee
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 9.296

  6 in total

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