Real-time objective assessment of knot quality with a portable tensiometer is superior to execution time for assessment of laparoscopic knot-tying performance

Surg Innov. 2005 Sep;12(3):233-7. doi: 10.1177/155335060501200308.

Abstract

Objective: Laparoscopic intracorporeal knot tying is a difficult skill to acquire. Currently, time to complete a knot is the most commonly used metric to assess the acquisition of this skill; however, without a measure of knot quality, time is a poor indicator of skills mastery. Others have shown that knot quality can be accurately assessed with a tensiometer, but obtaining this type of assessment has typically been cumbersome. We investigated a new method of real-time assessment of knot quality that allows for more practical use of knot quality as a performance metric.

Methods: Eleven experienced endoscopic surgeons tied 100 intracorporeal knots in a standard box trainer. Each of the knots was immediately tested using the InSpec 2200 benchtop tensiometer (INSTRON, Canton MA) where a knot quality score (KQS) is generated based on the load handling properties of the knotted suture. The execution time was also recorded for each knot.

Results: The assessment of all knots ended with one of two end points: knots that slipped (n=48) or knots that held until the suture broke (n=52). Knots that slip are generally of poorer quality than those that held. Execution time did not correlate with knot-quality score (r=0.009, P=.9), and the mean execution time did not differ significantly between slipped and held knots (65 vs 68 seconds, P=.8). No completion time criteria were able to accurately predict slipped versus held knots. The mean KQS difference between held and slipped knots was highly significant (24 vs 12, P<.0001). A knot with a KQS exceeding 20 was nearly 10 times more likely to hold than slip.

Conclusion: Time to complete a knot is a poor metric for the objective assessment of intracorporeal knot-tying performance in the absence of a measure of knot quality. Real-time evaluation of the knot quality can accurately distinguish well-tied knots from poorly tied knots. This mode of assessment should be incorporated into training curriculum for surgical knot tying.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Clinical Competence*
  • Evaluation Studies as Topic
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Laparoscopy / methods*
  • Male
  • Manometry
  • Sensitivity and Specificity
  • Suture Techniques*
  • Sutures
  • Task Performance and Analysis
  • Tensile Strength
  • Time Factors