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Development and validation of a high‐fidelity phonomicrosurgical trainer
Author(s) -
Klein Adam M.,
Gross Jennifer
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the laryngoscope
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1531-4995
pISSN - 0023-852X
DOI - 10.1002/lary.26230
Subject(s) - trainer , wilcoxon signed rank test , fidelity , computer science , test (biology) , consistency (knowledge bases) , high fidelity , vocal folds , medicine , medical physics , physical medicine and rehabilitation , surgery , artificial intelligence , mann–whitney u test , larynx , engineering , telecommunications , paleontology , electrical engineering , biology , programming language
Objectives To validate the use of a high‐fidelity phonomicrosurgical trainer. Study Design A high‐fidelity phonomicrosurgical trainer, based on a previously validated model by Contag et al., 1 was designed with multilayered vocal folds that more closely mimic the consistency of true vocal folds, containing intracordal lesions to practice phonomicrosurgical removal. A training module was developed to simulate the true phonomicrosurgical experience. A validation study with novice and expert surgeons was conducted. Methods Novices and experts were instructed to remove the lesion from the synthetic vocal folds, and novices were given four training trials. Performances were measured by the amount of time spent and tissue injury (microflap, superficial, deep) to the vocal fold. An independent Student t test and Fisher exact tests were used to compare subjects. A matched‐paired t test and Wilcoxon signed rank tests were used to compare novice performance on the first and fourth trials and assess for improvement. Results Experts completed the excision with less total errors than novices ( P = .004) and made less injury to the microflap ( P = .05) and superficial tissue ( P = .003). Novices improved their performance with training, making less total errors ( P = .002) and superficial tissue injuries ( P = .02) and spending less time for removal ( P = .002) after several practice trials. Conclusion This high‐fidelity phonomicrosurgical trainer has been validated for novice surgeons. It can distinguish between experts and novices; and after training, it helped to improve novice performance. Level of Evidence N/A. Laryngoscope , 127:888–893, 2017

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