Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine (Dec 2019)

Use of smart glasses for ultrasound-guided peripheral venous access: a randomized controlled pilot study

  • Hyunmook Lim,
  • Min Joung Kim,
  • Joon Min Park,
  • Kyung Hwan Kim,
  • Junseok Park,
  • Dong Wun Shin,
  • Hoon Kim,
  • Woochan Jeon,
  • Hyunjong Kim,
  • Jungeon Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15441/ceem.19.029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
pp. 356 – 361

Abstract

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Objective Smart glasses can provide sonographers with real-time ultrasound images. In the present study, we aimed to evaluate the utility of smart-glasses for ultrasound-guided peripheral venous access. Methods In this randomized, crossover-design, simulation study, 12 participants were recruited from the emergency department residents at a university hospital. Each participant attempted ultrasound-guided peripheral venous access on a pediatric phantom at intervals of 5 days with (glasses group) or without (non-glasses group) the use of smart glasses. In the glasses group, participants confirmed the ultrasound image through the lens of the smart glasses. In the non-glasses group, participants confirmed the ultrasound image through the display viewer located next to the phantom. Procedure time was regarded as the primary outcome, while secondary outcomes included the number of head movements for the participant, number of skin punctures, number of needle redirections, and subjective difficulty. Results No significant differences in procedural time were observed between the groups (non-glasses group: median time, 15.5 seconds; interquartile range [IQR], 10.3 to 27.3 seconds; glasses group: median time, 19.0 seconds; IQR, 14.3 to 39.3 seconds; P=0.58). The number of head movements was lower in the glasses group than in the non-glasses group (glasses group: median, 0; IQR, 0 to 0; non-glasses group: median, 4; IQR, 3 to 5; P<0.01). No significant differences in the number of skin punctures or needle restrictions were observed between the groups. Conclusion Our results indicate that smart-glasses may aid in ensuring ultrasound-guided peripheral venous access by reducing head movements.

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