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ENROLLING BY INVITATION
NCT07506330

The SENSE Study: Surgical ENvironment Stress Evaluation

Sponsor: University College, London

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Surgical procedures such as total hip and knee arthroplasty require a complex set of physical and cognitive skills, expert execution, and inevitably place a high stress load on the surgeon. While the primary focus of healthcare is typically aimed at the patient, the high physical and mental stress placed on surgeons is of equal significance and should be addressed in order to support surgical teams. Robot-assisted surgery is purported to improve surgical outcomes for both patients and surgeons, particularly by improving surgical efficiency and reducing physical and cognitive load on the surgeon. This stress load typically requires a combination gross and fine motor skills, physical exertion, spatial cognition, executive functioning, inhibitory-control, decision-making, communication and team management. Robotic assistance can reduce some of the cognitive load experienced during these processes, although it is also likely to be replaced by new thought-processes (e.g. numerical reasoning, coordinating screen and patient inputs, etc) that require equally important levels of training and expertise. Numerous studies have explored the effects of conducting surgery on surgeon stress, but these are largely limited to measuring heart rate variability. A few research groups have implemented fNIRS brain imaging in surgical settings to study the effects of different operating methods on cognitive stress in clinicians, demonstrating the potential of this technology in understanding more about cognitive processes and cognitive load involved in surgery. However, these have not yet been implemented in the context of orthopaedic surgery.

Official title: The SENSE Study: Surgical ENvironment Stress Evaluation. Utilising Brain fNIRS to Evaluate Cognitive and Physical Stress in Surgical Leads During Conventional and Robotic Arthroplasty

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 65 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

6

Start Date

2026-04-01

Completion Date

2028-03

Last Updated

2026-04-07

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

PROCEDURE

total joint arthroplasty

robotic assisted total joint arthroplasty

PROCEDURE

total joint arthroplasty

conventional total joint arthroplasty

Locations (1)

UCL Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

London, United Kingdom