Correlation between Surgical Manipulations and the Variation of Surgeon's Heart Rate in Brain Surgery: Technical Note
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
For improvement of surgical performance and safety, we record surgeries by video cameras. However, analysis of the video records is time consuming. To help this task, we are developing methods to automatically mark up significant time points in the surgery. As a possible mean for the marking, we focused on the surgeon's heart rate. During a craniotomy of an intracranial glioma, we recorded the surgeon's electrocardiogram using a telemeter and measured the R-to-R interval (RRI). We detected the stable state of heart rate as a peak-to-peak RRI of less than 5% of the mean of RRI data from 15 consecutive heartbeats. We also quantified the frequency of brain touches by the surgeon under the surgical microscope. We examined the association between the stability of surgeon's heart rate and the brain touches using a chi-square test. As the result, the stable state of surgeon's heart rate was associated with the brain touches (p < 0.05, odds ratio 5.1). We edited a one-minute digest video of the surgery based on only the heart rate data, and it was sufficient to understand how the surgery was preceded.
- 社団法人 日本脳神経外科学会の論文
著者
-
MURAGAKI Yoshihiro
Institute of Advanced Biomedical Engineering and Science, Tokyo Women's Medical University
-
ISEKI Hiroshi
Institute of Advanced Biomedical Engineering and Science, Tokyo Women's Medical University
-
NAMBU Kyojiro
Institute of Advanced Biomedical Engineering and Science, Tokyo Women's Medical University
-
SAKURAI Yasuo
Toshiba Medical Systems Corporation, Otawara, Tochigi
-
NAMBU Kyojiro
Institute of Advanced Biomedical Engineering and Science, Tokyo Women's Medical University
関連論文
- A huge congenital arachnoid cyst in a rheumatoid arthritis patient
- New isolation system for collecting living cells from tissue(CELL AND TISSUE ENGINEERING)
- Correlation between Surgical Manipulations and the Variation of Surgeon's Heart Rate in Brain Surgery: Technical Note