眼动追踪技术确定超声引导区域麻醉的操作熟练度。

G Andrew Wright, Rahool Patel, Koraly Perez-Edgar, Xiaoxue Fu, Kayla Brown, Sanjib Adhikary, Adrian Zurca
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:眼动追踪测量注意模式,这可能为评估程序性专业知识提供见解。本研究的目的是确定在超声引导区域麻醉过程中使用眼动追踪来评估视觉固定模式的可行性,并评估有经验、中级和新手医生之间的差异。方法:被试戴眼动追踪眼镜,对新鲜尸体模型进行超声引导坐骨神经阻滞3次。对参与者在每个地点的注视和停留时间进行比较。眼球注视路径被用来衡量熵,即参与者在不同地点切换注视的频率。结果:5名主治麻醉医师、5名具有超声引导区域麻醉经验的麻醉科三年级住院医师和5名医学生完成了本研究。经验丰富的个体更容易成功实施坐骨神经阻滞(主治医生5/5,住院医生5/5,学生0/5;P = .002),并且执行过程更快(平均:主治医生62.6秒,住院医生106.4秒,学生134.4秒;P = .089)。随着练习,参与者的速度逐渐加快(试验1:41.8秒,试验2:29.2秒,试验3:28.9秒;P = 0.012),每次试验的平均眼移次数从10.8次降至6.5次至6次(P = 0.010)。主治医师注视超声监护仪的时间明显少于实习医师(P = 0.035)。从试验1到试验3,平均视觉熵逐渐下降(P = .03),随着经验的增加,平均视觉熵逐渐下降(P = .15)。熵与任务时间有很强的相关性(r(16) = 0.826, P = .001)。结论:在超声引导的区域麻醉过程中,经验丰富的提供者进行较少的来回视觉固定,花费较少的时间,并且表现出较少的熵值。移动眼动追踪有可能提供额外的客观表现衡量标准,不仅有助于确定程序能力,还有助于区分熟练程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Eye-Tracking Technology to Determine Procedural Proficiency in Ultrasound-Guided Regional Anesthesia.

Background: Eye-tracking measures attention patterns, which may offer insight into evaluating procedural expertise. The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of using eye tracking to assess visual fixation patterns when performing an ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia procedure and to assess for differences between experienced, intermediate, and novice practitioners.

Methods: Participants performed an ultrasound-guided sciatic nerve block 3 times on a fresh cadaver model while wearing eye-tracking glasses. Gaze fixation and dwell time on each location were compared between participants. Eye-gaze paths were used to derive a measure of entropy, or how often participants switched gaze fixations between locations.

Results: Five attending anesthesiologists, 5 third-year anesthesiology residents with prior ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia experience, and 5 medical students completed the study. Individuals with more experience were more likely to successfully perform the sciatic nerve block (5/5 attendings, 5/5 residents, 0/5 students; P = .002) and performed the procedure faster (average: attendings 62.6 seconds, residents 106.4 seconds, students 134.4 seconds; P = .089). Participants were progressively faster with practice (Trial 1: 41.8 seconds, Trial 2: 29.2 seconds, Trial 3: 28.9 seconds; P = .012), and the average number of eye shifts per trial decreased from 10.8 to 6.5 to 6 (P = .010). Attending physicians spent significantly less time fixating on the ultrasound monitor compared to trainees (P = .035). Average visual entropy progressively decreased from Trial 1 to Trial 3 (P = .03) and with greater experience (P = .15). There was a strong correlation between entropy and time on task (r(16) = 0.826, P = .001).

Conclusions: Experienced providers make fewer back-and-forth visual fixations, spend less time in the procedure, and demonstrate less entropy during ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia procedures. Mobile eye-tracking has the potential to provide additional objective measures of performance that may help not only determine procedural competence but also distinguish between levels of proficiency.

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