• World Neurosurg · Dec 2020

    Neurosurgical operative videos: an analysis of an increasingly popular educational resource.

    • Joshua D Knopf, Rahul Kumar, Michael Barats, Paul Klimo, Frederick A Boop, L Madison Michael, Jonathan E Martin, Markus Bookland, and David S Hersh.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, UConn School of Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut, USA.
    • World Neurosurg. 2020 Dec 1; 144: e428e437e428-e437.

    ObjectiveSurgical education has increasingly relied on electronic learning. In particular, online operative videos have become a core resource within neurosurgery. We analyze the forums for neurosurgical operative videos.MethodsOperative videos from 5 sources were reviewed: 1) the NEUROSURGERY Journal YouTube channel; 2) the American Association of Neurological Surgeons Neurosurgery YouTube channel; 3) The Neurosurgical Atlas Operative Video Cases; 4) Operative Neurosurgery; and 5) Neurosurgical Focus: Video. Title, year of publication, senior author, institution, country, and subspecialty were documented for each video.ResultsA total of 1233 videos showing 1247 surgeries were identified. Ten videos included >1 surgery; of those, there was a median of 2 surgeries (interquartile range, 2.0-2.5) per video. The most frequently represented subspecialties included vascular (48.3%), tumor (35.2%), and skull base surgery (27.5%), with almost 40% of videos showing >1 category. Videos were submitted by investigators from 28 countries, but 82.1% of the videos originated in the United States.ConclusionsNeurosurgical operative videos have become increasingly common through a variety of online platforms. Future efforts may benefit from collecting videos from underrepresented regions and subspecialties, providing long-term follow-up data and showing techniques for managing complications.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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