Background and Objectives
Point-of-care neuromuscular ultrasound (NMUS) is increasingly used in the evaluation of peripheral nervous system disorders; however, there remains a gap in education and training for neurology residents. We evaluated whether neurology residents can feasibly be trained in basic NMUS skills and nerve cross-sectional area (CSA) measurement and whether they value incorporation of this training into their curriculum.
Methods
Participants included neurology residents (postgraduate years 1–5) at the University of Alberta (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada). All completed pretraining and posttraining surveys using a Likert scale, rating their confidence in independently performing NMUS and their degree of agreement regarding the educational value of NMUS training. Residents underwent training (7 hours) comprising 1 didactic and 2 hands-on sessions, detailing NMUS of median, ulnar, and fibular nerves. Participants could then opt-in to a posttraining testing session where CSA measurements (mm
2
) of the median, ulnar, and fibular nerve at multiple sites were independently performed on 3 healthy volunteers and compared with measurements obtained by the trainer.
Results
Eighteen residents participated in training and pretraining/posttraining surveys. Nine completed the testing component. Nerve CSA measurement reliability between the trainer and trainees across all nerve sites combined was very good (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC] 0.93, 95% CI 0.83–0.96) but varied by nerve and site. ICC was good to very good (0.62–0.95) except for the ulnar nerve-distal forearm/wrist (0.39–0.58) and fibular nerve-fibular head (0.12) sites. The coefficient of variation (CoV) across all sites was 19.6% (95% CI 17.3–21.8) and best for the median nerve-wrist site at 15.5% (9.8–20.8). The mean absolute difference between trainer and trainee measurements was low (<0.5 mm
2
across all sites). Comparing pretraining and posttraining survey responses, there was a significant increase in agreement that basic NMUS operational skills were obtained and in confidence in independently measuring each nerve. NMUS training was considered a valuable component of a neurology residency program curriculum (median rating: strongly agree).
Discussion
Neurology residents across stages of training can acquire basic NMUS and CSA measurement skills of the median and ulnar nerves after 2 half-days of training and value incorporation of NMUS training in their educational curriculum.