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Fine-motor skills testing and prediction of endovascular performance

Background Performing endovascular procedures requires good control of fine-motor digital movements and hand–eye coordination. Objective assessment of such skills is difficult. Trainees acquire control of catheter/wire movements at various paces. However, little is known to what extent talent plays...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Acta radiologica (1987) 2013-12, Vol.54 (10), p.1165-1174
Main Authors: Bech, Bo, Lönn, Lars, Schroeder, Torben V, Ringsted, Charlotte
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Background Performing endovascular procedures requires good control of fine-motor digital movements and hand–eye coordination. Objective assessment of such skills is difficult. Trainees acquire control of catheter/wire movements at various paces. However, little is known to what extent talent plays for novice candidates at entry to practice. Purpose To study the association between performance in a novel aptitude test of fine-motor skills and performance in simulated procedures. Material and Methods The test was based on manual course-tracking using a proprietary hand-operated roller-bar device coupled to a personal computer with monitor view rotation. A total of 40 test repetitions were conducted separately with each hand. Test scores were correlated with simulator performance. Group A (n = 14), clinicians with various levels of endovascular experience, performed a simulated procedure of contralateral iliac artery stenting. Group B (n = 19), medical students, performed 10 repetitions of crossing a challenging aortic bifurcation in a simulator. Results The test score differed markedly between the individuals in both groups, in particular with the non-dominant hand. Group A: the test score with the non-dominant hand correlated significantly with simulator performance assessed with the global rating scale SAVE (R = –0.69, P = 0.007). There was no association observed from performances with the dominant hand. Group B: there was no significant association between the test score and endovascular skills acquisition neither with the dominant nor with the non-dominant hand. Conclusion Clinicians with increasing levels of endovascular technical experience had developed good fine-motor control of the non-dominant hand, in particular, that was associated with good procedural performance in the simulator. The aptitude test did not predict endovascular skills acquisition among medical students, thus, cannot be suggested for selection of novice candidates. Procedural experience and practice probably supplant the influence of innate abilities (talent) over time.
ISSN:0284-1851
1600-0455
DOI:10.1177/0284185113491088