1. Clarifying optimal outcome measures in intermittent and continuous laryngeal neuromonitoring
- Author
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Rick Schneider, Marcin Barczyński, Gayle E. Woodson, Allen S. Ho, Che-Wei Wu, Elizabeth Cottril, Thomas J. Musholt, Erin Buczek, Peter Angelos, Maria J. Téllez, Catherine F. Sinclair, Greg W. Randolph, V A Makarin, Neil Tolley, Brendan C. Stack, and Joseph Scharpf
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Future studies ,Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve ,business.industry ,Outcome measures ,Modified delphi ,Nerve injury ,Functional integrity ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Injuries ,Thyroidectomy ,medicine ,Recurrent laryngeal nerve ,Humans ,Larynx ,medicine.symptom ,Vocal Cord Palsy ,business ,Vocal Cord Paralysis - Abstract
Background Intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) techniques have evolved over the past decade into intermittent IONM (I-IONM) and continuous IONM (C-IONM) modes of application. Despite many prior publications on both types of IONM, there remains uncertainty about what outcomes should be measured for each form of IONM. The primary objective of this paper is to define categories of benefit for I-IONM/C-IONM and to clarify and standardize their reporting outcomes. Methods Expert review consensus statement utilizing modified Delphi methodology. Results I-IONM provides diagnosis, classification, and prevention of nerve injury through accurate and early nerve identification. C-IONM provides real-time information on nerve functional integrity and thus may prevent some types of nerve injury but cannot assist in nerve localization. Sudden mechanisms of nerve injury cannot be predicted or prevented by either technique. Conclusions I-IONM and C-IONM are complementary techniques. Future studies evaluating the utility of IONM should focus on outcomes that are appropriate to the type of IONM being utilized.
- Published
- 2021
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