학술논문

Ergonomics and performance of using prismatic loupes in simulated surgical tasks among surgeons – a randomized controlled, cross-over trial
Document Type
article
Source
Frontiers in Public Health, Vol 11 (2024)
Subject
prismatic loupes
workload assessment
intervention
surgical ergonomics
inertial measurement unit
electromyography
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Language
English
ISSN
2296-2565
Abstract
IntroductionRecently developed prismatic loupes may mitigate the high physical workload and risk of neck disorders associated with traditional surgical loupes among surgeons. However, research in this area, particularly among surgeons, is sparse. This study examines the impact of prismatic loupes on surgeons’ physical workload, musculoskeletal discomfort, and performance during simulated surgical tasks.Materials and methodsNineteen out of twenty recruited surgeons performed three tasks in a fixed-order with their own loupes and both low-tilt (LT) and high-tilt (HT) prismatic loupes, in a randomized order. The primary outcomes were the median inclination angles and velocities of the head, trunk, and upper arms, along with the median muscle activity of the cervical erector spinae (CES), upper trapezius (UT), and lumbar erector spinae (LES) for each pair of loupes. The secondary outcomes included performance (completion time and errors), perceived body-part discomfort, and subjective evaluation of the three pairs of loupes.ResultsUsing prismatic loupes, either LT or HT, compared with the surgeons’ own loupes yielded lower head inclinations (all p