Abstract

To present a new low-cost high fidelity bench model of cryopreserved trachea that can be used to learn surgical skills from medical students to cardiothoracic surgery fellows. Ten tracheas were harvested from ten non-trachea related research dogs at the moment of euthanasia. Each trachea was trimmed in six or seven rings segments. They were cryopreserved and stored during 60 days. The day programmed for surgical skills practice, they were thawed to room temperature. Forty segments have been used. After defrosting, all the segments kept their normal anatomic shape and structural integrity. Two incisions were made on every tracheal segment and sutured with running or separate stitches with 5-0 polypropilene. There were no complications such as cartilage ruptures, neither tears on the mucosae, the cartilages nor the membranous posterior membrane. The cryopreserved trachea is a high fidelity, practical, reproducible, portable, low-cost bench model. It allows cardiothoracic fellows to learn how to handle a trachea, as well as to perfect their surgical and suture abilities before applying them on a real patient's trachea.

Highlights

  • All the surgical trainees learn in real operative settings, on real patients

  • In order to solve this situation, the health centers have developed laboratory-based training programs to teach and learn surgical skills for junior and senior surgeons based on simulators that vary in the level of realism in regards with the live human[4,5,6]

  • Ethical/legal and economical issues in the use of human cadavers, live laboratory animals and virtual reality simulators have prompted the use of numerous bench models made of organic or synthetic materials[1,2,3,7,8,9,10,11]

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Summary

Introduction

All the surgical trainees learn in real operative settings, on real patients. Ethical/legal and economical issues in the use of human cadavers, live laboratory animals and virtual reality simulators have prompted the use of numerous bench models made of organic or synthetic materials[1,2,3,7,8,9,10,11]. Most of these bench models are focused to trainees in general surgery, but few bench models are available for cardiothoracic fellows

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