Objective: Teleoperated robot-assisted minimally-invasive surgery (RAMIS) offers many advantages over open surgery, but RAMIS training still requires optimization. Existing motor learning theories could improve RAMIS training. However, there is a gap between current knowledge based on simple movements and training approaches required for the more complicated work of RAMIS surgeons. Here, we studied how surgeons cope with time-dependent perturbations.
Methods: We used the da Vinci Research Kit and investigated the effect of time-dependent force and motion perturbations on learning a circular pattern-cutting surgical task. Fifty-four participants were assigned to two experiments, with two groups for each: a control group trained without perturbations and an experimental group trained with 1Hz perturbations. In the first experiment, force perturbations alternatingly pushed participants' hands inwards and outwards in the radial direction. In the second experiment, the perturbation constituted a periodic up-and-down motion of the task platform.
Results: Participants trained with perturbations learned how to overcome them and improve their performances during training without impairing them after the perturbations were removed. Moreover, training with motion perturbations provided participants with an advantage when encountering the same or other perturbations after training, compared to training without perturbations.
Conclusion: Periodic perturbations can enhance RAMIS training without impeding the learning of the perturbed task.
Significance: Our results demonstrate that using challenging training tasks that include perturbations can better prepare surgical trainees for the dynamic environment they will face with patients in the operating room.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TBME.2024.3450702 | DOI Listing |
Nurs Health Sci
March 2025
School of Health, University of the Sunshine Coast, Petrie, Queensland, Australia.
The COVID-19 pandemic had immediate impact on nursing students enrolled in postgraduate and post-registration nursing courses. Some students were required to undertake additional clinical hours and place their studies on hold, while others had clinical experiences and face-to-face classes suspended, with online learning modes quickly mobilized. While there have been many reports on the impact and experience of these changes on undergraduate students, limited reports have focused on challenges for nursing students who were registered for practice following completion of their undergraduate studies, and were enrolled in higher degree, postgraduate education programs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Imaging
February 2025
Emory University School of Medicine, 550 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, GA 30308, USA. Electronic address:
Rationale And Objectives: To evaluate radiologists' perspectives regarding American Medical Association Category 1 Continuing Medical Education (Cat-1 CME) activities in private practice (PP) and teleradiology (TR), as well as American Board of Radiology Maintenance of Certification (ABR MOC) program participation status.
Materials And Methods: An electronic survey informed by existing literature regarding physician Cat-1 CME use and opinions was distributed via email to a national radiology practice. The survey was open for seventeen days in 2023, with a single reminder.
Cancer Epidemiol
December 2024
Radiology Partners Research Institute, California, USA; Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, USA.
Introduction: Despite efforts to improve national lung cancer screening rates, only 4 % of eligible high-risk patients pursue this opportunity annually.
Objective: The goal of this study was to better understand the system, provider, and patient-level barriers to lung cancer screening METHODS: 300 high-risk patients in the southern Nevada region who met the criteria for lung cancer screening were given a questionnaire during their outpatient visit for low dose chest CT from August 2023 through February 2024.
Results: The most common reported barriers were absence of symptoms (38 %), not wishing to know that they had cancer (30 %), and not having awareness of the eligibility for CT screening (24 %).
Mol Neurobiol
November 2024
Graduate Program in Biological Sciences: Toxicological Biochemistry, Center in Natural and Exact Sciences, Federal University of Santa Maria, Santa Maria, RS, Brazil.
A paradigm shift in the understanding of bidirectional interactions between peripheral and central nervous systems is essential for development of rehabilitation and preventive interventions based on physical exercise. Although a causal relationship has not been completely established, modulation of voltage-dependent ion channels (Ca, Cl, K, Na, lactate-, H) in skeletal and neuronal cells provides opportunities to maintain force production during exercise and reduce the risk of disease. However, there are caveats to consider when interpreting the effects of physical exercise on this bidirectional axis, since exercise protocol details (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Sports Med Rep
November 2024
Exercise Biochemistry Laboratory, Center of Physical Education and Sports, Federal University of Santa Maria, Santa Maria, Brazil.
Use of prohibited substances and methods (doping) by elite athletes is a complex and multifactorial behavior. Understanding the factors associated with doping behavior is crucial to identifying potential intervention targets to reduce doping among this group. However, there are limited data on the prevalence and correlations of self-reported prohibited substance use among Brazilian Olympic athletes.
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