Teaching neurological disorders with ultrasound: A novel workshop for medical students.
Authors: Shah VS, Cavalcanti M, Scheetz S, Bahner DP, Dornbos DL, Prats MI
The goal of this study was to assess if a neurological disorder ultrasound workshop for the first-year medical students significantly enhanced the students' ability to retain and apply concepts related to neuroanatomy and neurophysiology. We performed a prospective study to evaluate student performance before and after an optional ultrasound workshop. Data were collected through a within-population pretest-posttest design. Purposive sampling was used to recruit first-year medical students for this study. The six stations were transcranial doppler ultrasound, ocular ultrasound, ultrasound-guided external ventricular drain placement, high-intensity focused ultrasound for brain lesions, carotid artery scan with ultrasound, and ultrasound-guided central line placement. We used a pre-post workshop survey to identify opinions and perceptions about ultrasound and a pre-post workshop test to assess knowledge about neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and related ultrasound topics. Twenty-two 22 first-year medical students consented to participate in this study. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test showed a statistically significant difference in pre- and posttest scores, suggesting that participants demonstrated higher levels of medical knowledge related to neurological physiology, anatomy, and ultrasound after participating in the workshop. The analysis of the pre-post survey showed participants attributed greater value to ultrasound as a useful tool for their future medical practice after participation in the event (Z = -2.45, <i>P</i> = 0.014). There is value in integrating experiences with ultrasound into the neurological disorder block of medical school. Future studies, with a larger sample size, are needed to further explore the efficacy of this workshop in enhancing knowledge retention.
Introduction
Purpose
Other
Study Objective
To assess whether a neurological disorder ultrasound workshop for first-year medical students improves their retention and application of neuroanatomy and neurophysiology concepts.
Animal model / Human subject
Human (Homo sapiens); strain: N/A; age: first-year medical students (age not specified); sex: not specified
Disease model
Neurological disorders (educational focus; no specific disease model)
MRI or image guidance method
Not specified in the paper
Targeted brain region(s)
Not Specified
Target coordinates
Not provided
Cargo name and characteristics
Not specified in the provided text
Route of administration
Not applicable — no drug or cargo was administered; the study evaluated an educational ultrasound workshop.
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Participation in a neurological disorder ultrasound workshop significantly improved first-year medical students' knowledge of neuroanatomy and neurophysiology (higher posttest scores) and increased their perception of ultrasound's usefulness for future practice.
Duration of biological effect
Not reported
Safety-related matter
No safety concerns, adverse effects, or complications were reported or mentioned in the paper.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Not specified in the provided text.
FUS Frequency
Not specified
FUS Intensity
Not reported
FUS Pressure
Not reported
FUS Mode
not specified
Pulse duration
Not reported
Duration of a single FUS session
Not reported in the paper
Focal Characteristics
Not reported
Treatment frequency
not applicable
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