Khalid Bajunaid
McGill University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Khalid Bajunaid.
Journal of Surgical Education | 2016
Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Khalid Bajunaid; Muhammad A.S. Mullah; Ibrahim Marwa; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Jawad Fares; M Baggiani; Hamed Azarnoush; Gmaan Al Zharni; Sommer Christie; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Penny Werthner; Rolando F. Del Maestro
OBJECTIVE Current selection methods for neurosurgical residents fail to include objective measurements of bimanual psychomotor performance. Advancements in computer-based simulation provide opportunities to assess cognitive and psychomotor skills in surgically naive populations during complex simulated neurosurgical tasks in risk-free environments. This pilot study was designed to answer 3 questions: (1) What are the differences in bimanual psychomotor performance among neurosurgical residency applicants using NeuroTouch? (2) Are there exceptionally skilled medical students in the applicant cohort? and (3) Is there an influence of previous surgical exposure on surgical performance? DESIGN Participants were instructed to remove 3 simulated brain tumors with identical visual appearance, stiffness, and random bleeding points. Validated tier 1, tier 2, and advanced tier 2 metrics were used to assess bimanual psychomotor performance. Demographic data included weeks of neurosurgical elective and prior operative exposure. SETTING This pilot study was carried out at the McGill Neurosurgical Simulation Research and Training Center immediately following neurosurgical residency interviews at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. PARTICIPANTS All 17 medical students interviewed were asked to participate, of which 16 agreed. RESULTS Performances were clustered in definable top, middle, and bottom groups with significant differences for all metrics. Increased time spent playing music, increased applicant self-evaluated technical skills, high self-ratings of confidence, and increased skin closures statistically influenced performance on univariate analysis. A trend for both self-rated increased operating room confidence and increased weeks of neurosurgical exposure to increased blood loss was seen in multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS Simulation technology identifies neurosurgical residency applicants with differing levels of technical ability. These results provide information for studies being developed for longitudinal studies on the acquisition, development, and maintenance of psychomotor skills. Technical abilities customized training programs that maximize individual resident bimanual psychomotor training dependant on continuously updated and validated metrics from virtual reality simulation studies should be explored.
Journal of Surgical Education | 2018
Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Robin Sawaya; Khalid Bajunaid; Duaa Olwi; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Nicole Ledwos; Ibrahim Marwa; Ghusn Alsideiri; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Gmaan Al-Zhrani; Rolando F. Del Maestro
OBJECTIVE The study objectives were to assess if surgical performance and subjective assessment of a virtual reality simulator platform was influenced by changing force feedback devices. DESIGN Participants used the NeuroVR (formerly NeuroTouch) simulator to perform 5 practice scenarios and a realistic scenario involving subpial resection of a virtual reality brain tumor with simulated bleeding. The influence of force feedback was assessed by utilizing the Omni and Entact haptic systems. Tier 1, tier 2, and tier 2 advanced metrics were used to compare results. Operator subjective assessment of the haptic systems tested utilized seven Likert criteria (score 1 to 5). SETTING The study is carried out at the McGill Neurosurgical Simulation Research and Training Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Montreal, Canada. PARTICIPANTS Six expert operators in the utilization of the NeuroVR simulator platform. RESULTS No significant differences in surgical performance were found between the two haptic devices. Participants significantly preferred the Entact system on all 7 Likert criteria of subjective assessment. CONCLUSIONS Our results show no statistical differences in virtual reality surgical performance utilizing the two bimanual haptic devices tested. Subjective assessments demonstrated that participants preferred the Entact system. Our results suggest that to maximize realism of the training experience educators employing virtual reality simulators may find it useful to assess expert opinion before choosing a force feedback device.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2017
Khalid Bajunaid; Muhammad A.S. Mullah; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Jawad Fares; M Baggiani; Hamed Azarnoush; Sommer Christie; Gmaan Al-Zhrani; Ibrahim Marwa; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Penny Werthner; Rolando F. Del Maestro
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2017
Hamed Azarnoush; Samaneh Siar; Robin Sawaya; Gmaan Al Zhrani; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Khalid Bajunaid; Ibrahim Marwa; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Rolando F. Del Maestro
Journal of Surgical Education | 2017
Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Robin Sawaya; Duaa Olwi; Gmaan Al-Zhrani; Hamed Azarnoush; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Ghusn Alsideiri; Khalid Bajunaid; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Rolando F. Del Maestro
Operative Neurosurgery | 2018
Robin Sawaya; Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Hamed Azarnoush; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Khalid Bajunaid; Gmaan Al-Zhrani; Ghusn Alsideiri; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Rolando F. Del Maestro
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2018
Robin Sawaya; Ghusn Alsideiri; Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Hamed Azarnoush; Khalid Bajunaid; Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh; Rolando F. Del Maestro
Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2018
Robin Sawaya; Ghusn Alsideiri; Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Hamed Azarnoush; Khalid Bajunaid; A Sabbagh; R. F. Del Maestro
Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2016
Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Khalid Bajunaid; Muhammad A.S. Mullah; Ibrahim Marwa; Fahad E. Alotaibi; M Baggiani; Hamed Azarnoush; G Al Zharni; Sommer Christie; A Sabbagh; Penny Werthner; R. F. Del Maestro; Robin Sawaya
Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2016
R. F. Del Maestro; Hamed Azarnoush; S Siar; Gmaan Al-Zhrani; Alexander Winkler-Schwartz; Fahad E. Alotaibi; Khalid Bajunaid; Robin Sawaya; Abdulgadir Bugdadi; Ibrahim Marwa