University of Illinois Chicago
Browse

Percutaneous spinal fixation simulation with virtual reality and haptics

Download (1.16 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2013-12-03, 00:00 authored by Cristian J. Luciano, P. Pat Banerjee, Jeffery M. Sorenson, kevin T. Foley, Sameer A. Ansari, Silvio Rizzi, Anand Germanwalla, Leonard Kranzler, Prashant Chittiboina, Ben Z. Roitberg
BACKGROUND: In this study, we evaluated the use of a part-task simulator with 3-dimensional and haptic feedback as a training tool for percutaneous spinal needle placement. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the learning effectiveness in terms of entry point/target point accuracy of percutaneous spinal needle placement on a high-performance augmented-reality and haptic technology workstation with the ability to control the duration of computer-simulated fluoroscopic exposure, thereby simulating an actual situation. METHODS: Sixty-three fellows and residents performed needle placement on the simulator. A virtual needle was percutaneously inserted into a virtual patient's thoracic spine derived from an actual patient computed tomography data set. RESULTS: Ten of 126 needle placement attempts by 63 participants ended in failure for a failure rate of 7.93%. From all 126 needle insertions, the average error (15.69 vs 13.91), average fluoroscopy exposure (4.6 vs 3.92), and average individual performance score (32.39 vs 30.71) improved from the first to the second attempt. Performance accuracy yielded P = .04 from a 2-sample t test in which the rejected null hypothesis assumes no improvement in performance accuracy from the first to second attempt in the test session. CONCLUSION: The experiments showed evidence (P = .04) of performance accuracy improvement from the first to the second percutaneous needle placement attempt. This result, combined with previous learning retention and/or face validity results of using the simulator for open thoracic pedicle screw placement and ventriculostomy catheter placement, supports the efficacy of augmented reality and haptics simulation as a learning tool.

Funding

NIH NIBIB grant 1R21EB007650-01A1

History

Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. The final publication is available at www.lww.com/; DOI:0.1227/NEU.0b013e3182750a8d

Publisher

Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins

Language

  • en_US

issn

1524-4040

Issue date

2013-01-01

Usage metrics

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC