Litcius/Paper detail

Continuous intraoperative neuromonitoring (cIONM) in head and neck surgery—a review

Petar Stanković, Jan Wittlinger, R Georgiew, Nina Dominas, Stephan Hoch, Thomas Wilhelm

2020HNO39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although the history of intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) dates back to the 19th century, the method did not evolve further than the mere differentiation of nerves until recently. Only the development of continuous IONM (cIONM) has allowed for non-stop analysis of excitation amplitude and latency during surgical procedures, which is nowadays integrated into the software of almost all commercially available neuromonitoring devices. The objective of cIONM is real-time monitoring of nerve status in order to recognize and prevent impending nerve injury and predict postoperative nerve function. Despite some drawbacks such as false-positive/negative alarms, technical artefacts, and rare adverse effects, cIONM remains a good instrument which is still under development. Active (acIONM) and passive (pcIONM) methods of cIONM are described in literature. The main fields of cIONM implementation are currently thyroid surgery (in which the vagal nerve is continuously stimulated) and surgery to the cerebellopontine angle (in which the facial nerve is either continuously stimulated or the discharge signal of the nerve is analyzed via pcIONM). In the latter surgery, continuous monitoring of the cochlear nerve is also established.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCerebellopontine angleIntraoperative neurophysiological monitoringRecurrent laryngeal nerveSurgeryHead and neck surgeryThyroidOtorhinolaryngologyAnesthesiaRadiologyMagnetic resonance imagingInternal medicineMeningioma and schwannoma managementThyroid and Parathyroid SurgeryIntraoperative Neuromonitoring and Anesthetic Effects