Visuospatial and psychomotor aptitude predicts endovascular performance of inexperienced individuals on a virtual reality simulator

Objectives This study evaluated virtual reality (VR) simulation for endovascular training of medical students to determine whether innate perceptual, visuospatial, and psychomotor aptitude (VSA) can predict initial and plateau phase of technical endovascular skills acquisition. Methods Twenty medica...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of vascular surgery 2010-04, Vol.51 (4), p.1035-1042
Hauptverfasser: Van Herzeele, Isabelle, MD, PhD, O'Donoghue, Kevin G.L., BSc, Aggarwal, Rajesh, MA, MRCS, PhD, Vermassen, Frank, MD, PhD, Darzi, Ara, KBE, MD, FRCS, Cheshire, Nicholas J.W., MD, FRCS
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives This study evaluated virtual reality (VR) simulation for endovascular training of medical students to determine whether innate perceptual, visuospatial, and psychomotor aptitude (VSA) can predict initial and plateau phase of technical endovascular skills acquisition. Methods Twenty medical students received didactic and endovascular training on a commercially available VR simulator. Each student treated a series of 10 identical noncomplex renal artery stenoses endovascularly. The simulator recorded performance data instantly and objectively. An experienced interventionalist rated the performance at the initial and final sessions using generic (out of 40) and procedure-specific (out of 30) rating scales. VSA were tested with fine motor dexterity (FMD, Perdue Pegboard), psychomotor ability (minimally invasive virtual reality surgical trainer [MIST-VR]), image recall (Rey-Osterrieth), and organizational aptitude (map-planning). VSA performance scores were correlated with the assessment parameters of endovascular skills at commencement and completion of training. Results Medical students exhibited statistically significant learning curves from the initial to the plateau performance for contrast usage (medians, 28 vs 17 mL, P < .001), total procedure time (2120 vs 867 seconds, P < .001), and fluoroscopy time (993 vs. 507 seconds, P < .001). Scores on generic and procedure-specific rating scales improved significantly (10 vs 25, P < .001; 8 vs 17 P < .001). Significant correlations were noted for FMD with initial and plateau sessions for fluoroscopy time ( rs = −0.564, P = .010; rs = −.449, P = .047). FMD correlated with procedure-specific scores at the initial session ( rs = .607, P = .006). Image recall correlated with generic skills at the end of training ( rs = .587, P = .006). Conclusions Simulator-based training in endovascular skills improved performance in medical students. There were significant correlations between initial endovascular skill and fine motor dexterity as well as with image recall at end of the training period. In addition to current recruitment strategies, VSA may be a useful tool for predictive validity studies.
ISSN:0741-5214
1097-6809
DOI:10.1016/j.jvs.2009.11.059