Objective: To measure surgical instrument movement during resident mastoidectomies and identify metrics that correlate with experience.
Study design: Retrospective case series.
Setting: Tertiary care center.
Subjects: Ten postgraduate year (PGY) 2, 6 PGY3, 7 PGY4, and 19 PGY5 recordings of mastoidectomy performed by otolaryngology residents.
Interventions: One-minute intraoperative recordings of mastoidectomies performed during cochlear implantation were collected. Drill and suction-irrigator motion were analyzed with sports motion tracking software.
Main outcome measures: Mean instrument speed, angle, and angular velocity were calculated. Mann-Whitney U tests compared mean instrument metrics between PGY levels. Change in drill speed for seven residents between their PGY2 to PGY5 years was individually analyzed.
Results: Mean drill speed was significantly greater for PGY5 residents compared with PGY2s (2.9 versus 1.8 cm/s, p = 0.001). Compared with PGY2 residents, suction speed was greater as a PGY5 (1.2 versus 0.9 cm/s; p = 0.201) and significantly greater as a PGY4 (1.5 versus 0.9 cm/s, p = 0.039). Of the seven residents individually analyzed, group mean drill speed increased by 0.4 cm/s, yearly.
Conclusions: Drill and suction-irrigator movement during the second minute of drilling of a cortical mastoidectomy seems to increase with resident level. Objective video analysis is a potential adjunct for differentiating novices from more experienced surgeons and monitoring surgical skills progress.
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