1. Characteristics and Usefulness of Neurophysiological Monitoring in Corrective Procedures for Abnormally Curved Spine in Young Patients.
- Author
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Michaeli A, Miller S, Danto J, Arzi H, Schroeder JE, and Ovadia D
- Abstract
Purpose: To identify and characterize events of deterioration in intraoperative neuromonitoring data during correction procedures for thoracic and lumbar abnormal spinal curvature in young patients., Methods: Records of 1,127 cases were retrospectively reviewed to identify events with deterioration of the neuromonitoring data. General etiological and demographic variables were summarized, and neuromonitoring events were studied and characterized., Results: Adolescent idiopathic cases were associated with female dominance and older age. Nonadolescent idiopathic cases were associated with a higher rate of neuromonitoring events. The neuromonitoring events evolved during the different procedural stages, were primarily reflected in the motor-evoked potential data and affected a range of neural structures to varying degrees. Most of the events were resolved, partially or completely, following a corresponding intervention by the surgical team, before the end of the procedure. Significant immediate weakness of the lower extremities was demonstrated in patients with unresolved neuromonitoring events, most of them were nonadolescent idiopathic patients., Conclusions: Neurophysiological monitoring enables the intraoperative assessment of the integrity of neural pathways and allows the detection of surgery-related impending neural injuries. Neuromonitoring contributes to intraoperative decision making, either when data are uneventful and allow confident continuation or when data deteriorate and lead to corresponding intervention. Further awareness should be paid to the vulnerable characteristics of the patient, surgery course, and neuromonitoring data. Proper interpretation of the neuromonitoring data, together with corresponding intervention by the surgeon when necessary, has the potential to reduce postoperative neurological insults and improve clinical outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors have no funding or conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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