Electrodiagnostics

Author(s):  
Alan Forster ◽  
Robert Morris

Clinical neurophysiology provides valuable information in neurosurgery, serving as: a diagnostic tool that can quantify type and severity of damage to the central and peripheral nervous system, a means of monitoring the safety of structures within and around the surgical site, and a method to map structures. As such it aides in identifying structures (e.g. finding sacral nerve roots within a spinal lipoma or nuclei within the thalamus), assessing functional integrity (e.g. motor pathways from cortex to any relevant accessible muscle), and monitoring their function while surgery occurs near to structures (e.g. VII while retraction during trigeminal microvascular decompression, and in scoliosis surgery) and provide guidance to technical operative steps (e.g. for selective dorsal rhizotomy). Intraoperative monitoring is not new, though the advances in equipment and technique of recent years have seen an explosion in the useful ways that neurophysiology can aid the neurosurgeon and protect the patient. The development of techniques to localize epileptic foci and map eloquent cerebral cortex in the 1950s produced major scientific advances as well as revolutionizing epilepsy surgery. Since the 1960s Tasker in Toronto, and Gillingham in Edinburgh, were recording from microelectrodes in the human thalamus to guide movement disorder surgery. Pioneers such as Møller have extended the applications of neurophysiological monitoring in skull base surgery. This chapter describes neurophysiological mapping and monitoring, and the different tools that are useful in different situations.

2020 ◽  
pp. 088506662096245
Author(s):  
Lauren K. Buhl ◽  
Andres Brenes Bastos ◽  
Richard J. Pollard ◽  
Jeffrey E. Arle ◽  
George P. Thomas ◽  
...  

Intraoperative neuromonitoring was introduced in the second half of the 20th century with the goal of preventing patient morbidity for patients undergoing complex operations of the central and peripheral nervous system. Since its early use for scoliosis surgery, the growth and utilization of IOM techniques expanded dramatically over the past 50 years to include spinal tumor resection and evaluation of cerebral ischemia. The importance of IOM has been broadly acknowledged, and in 1989, the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) released a statement that the use of SSEPs should be standard-of-care during spine surgery. In 2012, both the AAN and the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society (ACNS) recommended that: “Intraoperative monitoring (IOM) using SSEPs and transcranial MEPs be established as an effective means of predicting an increased risk of adverse outcomes, such as paraparesis, paraplegia, and quadriplegia, in spinal surgery.” With a multimodal approach that combines SSEPs, MEPs, and sEMG with tEMG and D waves, as appropriate, sensitivity and specificity can be maximized for the diagnosis of reversible insults to the spinal cord, nerve roots, and peripheral nerves. As with most patient safety efforts in the operating room, IOM requires contributions from and communication between a number of different teams. This comprehensive review of neuromonitoring techniques for surgery on the central and peripheral nervous system will highlight the technical, surgical and anesthesia factors required to optimize outcomes. In addition, this review will discuss important trouble shooting measures to be considered when managing ION changes concerning for potential injury.


Planta Medica ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 81 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
J Zhang ◽  
Z Yang ◽  
Y Zhu ◽  
L Wang ◽  
J Wang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Konstantin Gulyabin

Mills' syndrome is a rare neurological disorder. Its nosological nature is currently not completely determined. Nevertheless, Mills' syndrome is considered to be a rare variant of the degenerative pathology of the central nervous system – a variant of focal cortical atrophy. The true prevalence of this pathology is unknown, since this condition is more often of a syndrome type, observed in the clinical picture of a number of neurological diseases (primary lateral sclerosis, frontotemporal dementia, etc.) and is less common in isolated form.


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