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Physiological measurement · Dec 2013
Performance of the Sellick maneuver significantly improves when residents and trained nurses use a visually interactive guidance device in simulation.
- Christopher W Connor, Roya Saffary, and Eddy Feliz.
- Department of Anesthesiology Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
- Physiol Meas. 2013 Dec 1;34(12):1645-56.
AbstractWe examined the proper performance of the Sellick maneuver, a maneuver used to reduce the risk of aspiration of stomach contents during induction of general anesthesia, using a novel device that measures and visualizes the force applied to the cricoid cartilage using thin-film force sensitive resistors in a form suitable for in vivo use. Performance was tested in three stages with twenty anaesthesiology residents and twenty trained operating room nurses. Firstly, subjects applied force to the cricoid cartilage as was customary to them. Secondly, subjects used the device to guide the application of that force. Thirdly, subjects were again asked to perform the manoeuvre without visual guidance. Each test lasted 1 min and the amount of force applied was measured throughout. Overall, the Sellick maneuver was often not applied properly, with large variance between individual subjects. Performance and inter-subject consistency improved to a very highly significant degree when subjects were able to use the device as a visual guide (p < 0.001). Subsequent significant improvements in performances during the last, unguided test demonstrated that the device initiated learning.
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