Laparoscopic technique has demonstrated numerous advantages compared to open conventional surgery. Nevertheless, this procedure increases the surgeons fatigue and thus, the potential to commit errors that may harm the patient during the operation. The post-surgery pain is also augmented because the surgeons are forced to adopt non-neutral postures during the practice. This study reveals how a Postural Freedom element could help surgeons to improve the postural hygiene. During this study, thirteen participants with and without previous experience in laparoscopic surgery performed a test with two instruments: a prototype that implement this postural freedom concept and a conventional fixed instrument. The results obtained indicate that the postural freedom element allows the participants to maintain neutral positions during greatest part of the experiment and suggest that the implementation of an articulated element could increases the neutral positions adopted during a real laparoscopic procedure. The use of the postural freedom concept allowed to the participants to reduce the awkward positions during upper limb motions and to reduce displacements, avoiding extreme abductions that are common with the conventional fixed instruments.
It has been demonstrated that laparoscopic procedures benefit patients in terms of recovery time, exposure to infections and trauma. Nevertheless, it increases the number of problems for the surgeons, including the frequency and duration of awkward postures for surgeons. The repetition of these movements is considered the main cause for musculoskeletal disorders in surgeons´ upper limbs. The goal of this study is to evaluate the muscular activity and muscular fatigue effect produced by both, a conventional instrument and an instrument provided with the Postural Freedom (PF) feature; which consists in a ball socket articulation that allows a variable handle-to-shaft angle, on a conventional laparoscopic pistol-grip handle. Seventeen participants were evaluated during a static simulation using both instruments. Surface electromyography was used to compare the instruments in terms of muscular activity in each target position and muscular fatigue produced in the muscles trapezius, deltoids, biceps, and flexor carpi radialis. Trapezius and deltoids were the muscles most affected. Entrance and exit targets and targets facing the participants showed the higher muscular activity values. The PF prototype reduced muscular activity in all the muscles and in the majority of the target positions showing a reduction greater than 70% of the activity required by the trapezius and deltoid muscles in comparison to the conventional tool. Muscular fatigue was produced by both instruments but it presented lower frequency values with PF prototype. The results indicated that the use of conventional instruments impacts negatively on muscular activity during laparoscopic procedures, in terms of positions adopted. The PF feature in laparoscopic instrumentation reduced the muscular activity and also decreased the signals of muscular fatigue in the muscles evaluated in comparison with the conventional tool.
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