Pafitanis, G; Hadjiandreou, M; Alamri, A; Uff, C; Walsh, D; Myers, S
(2020)
The Exoscope versus operating microscope in microvascular surgery: A simulation non-inferiority trial.
Arch Plast Surg, 47 (3).
pp. 242-249.
ISSN 2234-6163
https://doi.org/10.5999/aps.2019.01473
SGUL Authors: Alamri, Bagher Alexander
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Exoscope is a novel high-definition digital camera system. There is limited evidence signifying the use of exoscopic devices in microsurgery. This trial objectively assesses the effects of the use of the Exoscope as an alternative to the standard operating microscope (OM) on the performance of experts in a simulated microvascular anastomosis. METHODS: Modus V Exoscope and OM were used by expert microsurgeons to perform standardized tasks. Hand-motion analyzer measured the total pathlength (TP), total movements (TM), total time (TT), and quality of end-product anastomosis. A clinical margin of TT was performed to prove non-inferiority. An expert performed consecutive microvascular anastomoses to provide the exoscopic learning curve until reached plateau in TT. RESULTS: Ten micro sutures and 10 anastomoses were performed. Analysis demonstrated statistically significant differences in performing micro sutures for TP, TM, and TT. There was statistical significance in TM and TT, however, marginal non-significant difference in TP regarding microvascular anastomoses performance. The intimal suture line analysis demonstrated no statistically significant differences. Non-inferiority results based on clinical inferiority margin (Δ) of TT=10 minutes demonstrated an absolute difference of 0.07 minutes between OM and Exoscope cohorts. A 51%, 58%, and 46% improvement or reduction was achieved in TT, TM, TP, respectively, during the exoscopic microvascular anastomosis learning curve. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that experts' Exoscope anastomoses appear non-inferior to the OM anastomoses. Exoscopic microvascular anastomosis was more time consuming but end-product (patency) in not clinically inferior. Experts' "warm-up" learning curve is steep but swift and may prove to reach clinical equality.
Item Type: |
Article
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Additional Information: |
Copyright © 2020 The Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Keywords: |
Exoscope, Microscopy, Microsurgery, Microvascular anastomosis, Video telescope operating monitor, Exoscope, Video telescope operating monitor, Microsurgery, Microscopy, Microvascular anastomosis |
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: |
Academic Structure > Molecular and Clinical Sciences Research Institute (MCS) |
Journal or Publication Title: |
Arch Plast Surg |
ISSN: |
2234-6163 |
Language: |
eng |
Dates: |
Date | Event |
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May 2020 | Published | 2 April 2020 | Accepted | 22 March 2022 | Published Online |
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Publisher License: |
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0 |
PubMed ID: |
32453933 |
Web of Science ID: |
WOS:000535681000008 |
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Go to PubMed abstract |
URI: |
https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/114547 |
Publisher's version: |
https://doi.org/10.5999/aps.2019.01473 |
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