5,345 research outputs found

    Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia Training Simulator Using Microsoft Kinect

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    We present a system for the interactive simulation of ultrasound guided peripheral nerve blocks using a Microsoft Kinect®. The system performs motion tracking of both the ultrasound probe and the nerve block needle. Software generates synthetic ultrasound images from previously captured ultrasound images. Details of the software elements in the system are described. Some of the current challenges and future work in this research are discussed

    Ultrasound Guidance in Perioperative Care

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    Ultrasound Guidance in Perioperative Care

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    Training in and assessment of the procedural skills required to perform peripheral nerve blockade

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    The training and ongoing education of medical practitioners has undergone major changes in an incremental fashion over the past 15 years. These changes have been driven by patient safety, educational, economic and legislative/regulatory factors. In the near future, training in procedural skills will undergo a paradigm shift to proficiency based progression with associated requirements for competence-based programmes, valid, reliable assessment tools and simulation technology. Before training begins, the learning outcomes require clear definition; any form of assessment applied should include measurement of these outcomes. Currently training in a procedural skill often takes place on an ad hoc basis. The number of attempts necessary to attain a defined degree of proficiency varies from procedure to procedure. Convincing evidence exists that simulation training helps trainees to acquire skills more efficiently rather than relying on opportunities in their clinical practice. Simulation provides a safe, stress free environment for trainees for skill acquisition, generalization and transfer via deliberate practice. The work described in this thesis contributes to a greater understanding of how medical procedures can be performed more safely and effectively through education. The effect of feedback, provided to novices in a standardized setting on a bench model, based on knowledge of performance was associated with an increase in the speed of skill acquisition and a decrease in error rate during initial learning. The timing of feedback was also associated with effective learning of skill. A marked attrition of skills (independent of the type of feedback provided) was demonstrable 24 hrs after they have first been learned. Using the principles of feedback as described above, when studying the effect of an intense training program on novices of varied years of experience in anaesthesia (i.e. the present training programmes / courses of an intense training day for one or more procedures). There was a marked attrition of skill at 24 hours with a significant correlation with increasing years of experience; there also appeared to be an inverse relationship between years of experience in anaesthesia and performance. The greater the number of years of practice experience, the longer it required a learner to acquire a new skill. The findings of the studies described in this thesis may have important implications for the trainers, trainees and training bodies in the design and implementation of training courses and the formats of delivery of changing curricula. Both curricula and training modalities will need to take account of characteristics of individual learners and the dynamic nature of procedural healthcare

    Local Anesthesia

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    Local anesthesia is a routine procedure in dermatological practice. This chapter deals with the basic principles of pharmacology and pharmacodynamics related to the most commonly used anesthetics in dermatology as well as its side effects, the most common anesthetic solutions, anesthesia techniques, and topical anesthesia

    Augmented Reality Ultrasound Guidance in Anesthesiology

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    Real-time ultrasound has become a mainstay in many image-guided interventions and increasingly popular in several percutaneous procedures in anesthesiology. One of the main constraints of ultrasound-guided needle interventions is identifying and distinguishing the needle tip from needle shaft in the image. Augmented reality (AR) environments have been employed to address challenges surrounding surgical tool visualization, navigation, and positioning in many image-guided interventions. The motivation behind this work was to explore the feasibility and utility of such visualization techniques in anesthesiology to address some of the specific limitations of ultrasound-guided needle interventions. This thesis brings together the goals, guidelines, and best development practices of functional AR ultrasound image guidance (AR-UIG) systems, examines the general structure of such systems suitable for applications in anesthesiology, and provides a series of recommendations for their development. The main components of such systems, including ultrasound calibration and system interface design, as well as applications of AR-UIG systems for quantitative skill assessment, were also examined in this thesis. The effects of ultrasound image reconstruction techniques, as well as phantom material and geometry on ultrasound calibration, were investigated. Ultrasound calibration error was reduced by 10% with synthetic transmit aperture imaging compared with B-mode ultrasound. Phantom properties were shown to have a significant effect on calibration error, which is a variable based on ultrasound beamforming techniques. This finding has the potential to alter how calibration phantoms are designed cognizant of the ultrasound imaging technique. Performance of an AR-UIG guidance system tailored to central line insertions was evaluated in novice and expert user studies. While the system outperformed ultrasound-only guidance with novice users, it did not significantly affect the performance of experienced operators. Although the extensive experience of the users with ultrasound may have affected the results, certain aspects of the AR-UIG system contributed to the lackluster outcomes, which were analyzed via a thorough critique of the design decisions. The application of an AR-UIG system in quantitative skill assessment was investigated, and the first quantitative analysis of needle tip localization error in ultrasound in a simulated central line procedure, performed by experienced operators, is presented. Most participants did not closely follow the needle tip in ultrasound, resulting in 42% unsuccessful needle placements and a 33% complication rate. Compared to successful trials, unsuccessful procedures featured a significantly greater (p=0.04) needle-tip to image-plane distance. Professional experience with ultrasound does not necessarily lead to expert level performance. Along with deliberate practice, quantitative skill assessment may reinforce clinical best practices in ultrasound-guided needle insertions. Based on the development guidelines, an AR-UIG system was developed to address the challenges in ultrasound-guided epidural injections. For improved needle positioning, this system integrated A-mode ultrasound signal obtained from a transducer housed at the tip of the needle. Improved needle navigation was achieved via enhanced visualization of the needle in an AR environment, in which B-mode and A-mode ultrasound data were incorporated. The technical feasibility of the AR-UIG system was evaluated in a preliminary user study. The results suggested that the AR-UIG system has the potential to outperform ultrasound-only guidance

    Body-Borne Computers as Extensions of Self

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    The opportunities for wearable technologies go well beyond always-available information displays or health sensing devices. The concept of the cyborg introduced by Clynes and Kline, along with works in various fields of research and the arts, offers a vision of what technology integrated with the body can offer. This paper identifies different categories of research aimed at augmenting humans. The paper specifically focuses on three areas of augmentation of the human body and its sensorimotor capabilities: physical morphology, skin display, and somatosensory extension. We discuss how such digital extensions relate to the malleable nature of our self-image. We argue that body-borne devices are no longer simply functional apparatus, but offer a direct interplay with the mind. Finally, we also showcase some of our own projects in this area and shed light on future challenges

    New Proposed Methodologies for Detection of Eye Diseases in Human Beings using HDL, Modelsim Matlab, Python & Tensor Flow w.r.t. the Bio-Medical Image Processing Point of View

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    In this research paper, the proposed methodologies for glaucoma detection are presented using different hardware & software tools

    A rehabilitative approach beyond the acute stroke event: a scoping review about functional recovery perspectives in the chronic hemiplegic patient

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    Background: Stroke is a main cause of disability worldwide and its neuro-rehabilitative management is not limited to the acute phase but requires continuity in the rehabilitation approach especially in the chronic phase. The aim of this scoping review was to highlight the different treatment opportunities available in neurorehabilitation, effective for patients with chronic stroke sequelae, not only in terms of maintaining motor function but also improving it. Methods: The literature search was conducted using the following databases: MEDLINE (PubMed), PEDro, Scopus, Web of Science (WOS), Cochrane from 2012 to February 2023. We selected Randomized Clinical Trials in English dealing with neurorehabilitation strategies in chronic hemiplegic patients after stroke focusing on motor function, muscular strength, gait, postural balance, spasticity, and quality of life. Results: According to the inclusion criteria, 47 articles were selected for our review. All of them were analyzed following the primary outcome and the rehabilitation technique used. Despite the different protocols used within the same technique and despite the chronicity of the disease, all studies report an improvement after the rehabilitation treatment of motor function and quality of life. Conclusion: The literature analyzed invites us to reflect respect to neurorehabilitation approach to the patient with chronic stroke sequelae often considered to have as its objective the maintenance of the present motor function and contain disability: instead, the review reports how, even in chronicity, the patient always reports margins of statistically and clinically significant improvement. The chronic stroke rehabilitation over 6 months has been proved effective in obtaining recovery in different settings
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