AI Article Synopsis

  • Neurophysiological monitoring helps keep patients safe during brain and spinal surgeries by checking how their nerves are working.
  • The most common methods used during spinal surgeries are somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs), motor evoked potentials (MEPs), and different types of electromyography.
  • This review explains how these techniques work, their advantages and limits, and why they are especially important during less invasive surgeries where the doctor can’t see everything clearly.

Article Abstract

Neurophysiological monitoring is of undoubted value for the intraoperative safety of neurosurgical procedures. Widely developed and used for cranial surgery, it is equally as effective, though perhaps less commonly employed, for spinal pathology. The most frequently used techniques for intraoperative monitoring during spinal surgery include somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs), motor evoked potentials (MEPs) and electromyography, which can either be spontaneous free-running (sEMG) or triggered (tEMG). The knowledge of the benefits and limitations of each modality is essential in optimising the value of intraoperative monitoring during spinal procedures. This review will analyse the single techniques, their anatomical and physiological basis, their use in spinal surgery as reliable indicators of functional injury, their limits and their application to specific procedures in minimally invasive surgery, such as the lateral transpsoas access for interbody fusion and the divergent trajectory for cortico-pedicular screws. In these particular techniques, because of reduced visual exposure, neuromonitoring is indeed essential to exploit the full potential of minimally invasive surgery, while avoiding damage to nervous structures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10143-017-0939-4DOI Listing

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