A Video Teaching Tool Is Effective for Training Residents in Hip Arthroplasty Templating.

Publication/Presentation Date

3-1-2023

Abstract

Work hour restrictions imposed on orthopedic surgery residents since the early 2000s have reduced educational opportunities at the workplace and encouraged alternative strategies for teaching outside the clinical setting. Preoperative templating is essential for safe and effective total hip arthroplasty (THA) and is accurate in predicting final implants. We sought to determine the effectiveness of a video tool for teaching orthopedic residents basic THA templating skills. We developed a video-based teaching tool with instructions on proper THA templating techniques. Ten cases were selected for testing, after excluding patients with severe hip deformities and poor-quality radiographs and only retaining those with concordance between templating by the senior authors and implanted components. The study subjects included three postgraduate year 1 (PGY-1), three PGY-2, and three PGY-5 residents, and three adult reconstruction fellows (PGY-6). Templating skills were assessed before and after watching the instructional video. The evaluation included the size and positioning of femoral and acetabular components, as well as the restoration of leg length. Each templating session was repeated twice. Variance was measured to evaluate consistency in measurements. A linear mixed model and F-test were used for statistical analyses. The number of years in training significantly affected performance prior to exposure to the instructional video. Post-exposure, there was a significant improvement in the accuracy of sizing and positioning of acetabular and femoral components for PGY-1, PGY-2, and PGY-5 residents. The results achieved were comparable to PGY-6 examiners, who did not gain substantial performance benefits from the instructional video. Limb length restoration was less affected by experience or exposure to the video. Component positioning and sizing, as well as leg length discrepancy (LLD), showed a significant decrease in variance after the intervention in all study groups. Video learning is reliable in teaching invaluable skills to orthopedic surgery residents without encroaching on work hours. We conceived a concise video to train orthopedic residents to perform THA templating with proper technique and demonstrated its efficiency and reproducibility.

Volume

15

Issue

3

First Page

35856

Last Page

35856

ISSN

2168-8184

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

37033582

Department(s)

Department of Surgery

Document Type

Article

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