The effect of video game "warm-up" on performance of laparoscopic surgery tasks

JSLS. 2012 Jan-Mar;16(1):3-9. doi: 10.4293/108680812X13291597715664.

Abstract

Background: Performing laparoscopic procedures requires special training and has been documented as a significant source of surgical errors. "Warming up" before performing a task has been shown to enhance performance. This study investigates whether surgeons benefit from "warming up" using select video games immediately before performing laparoscopic partial tasks and clinical tasks.

Methods: This study included 303 surgeons (249 men and 54 women). Participants were split into a control (n=180) and an experimental group (n=123). The experimental group played 3 previously validated video games for 6 minutes before task sessions. The Cobra Rope partial task and suturing exercises were performed immediately after the warm-up sessions.

Results: Surgeons who played video games prior to the Cobra Rope drill were significantly faster on their first attempt and across all 10 trials. The experimental and control groups were significantly different in their total suturing scores (t=2.28, df=288, P<.05). The overall Top Gun score showed that the experimental group performed marginally better overall.

Conclusion: This study demonstrates that subjects completing "warming-up" sessions with select video games prior to performing laparoscopic partial and clinical tasks (intracorporeal suturing) were faster and had fewer errors than participants not engaging in "warm-up." More study is needed to determine whether this translates into superior procedural execution in the clinical setting.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Laparoscopy* / education
  • Male
  • Suture Techniques / education
  • Task Performance and Analysis
  • Video Games*