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Erschienen in: Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery 2/2010

01.02.2010 | Endocrine Surgery

Electromyographic response persists after peripheral transection: endorsement of current concepts in recurrent laryngeal nerve monitoring in a porcine model

verfasst von: Torsten Birkholz, Andrea Irouschek, Dirk Labahn, Peter Klein, Joachim Schmidt

Erschienen in: Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | Ausgabe 2/2010

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Abstract

Background

Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy is a serious complication of endocrine surgery to the neck. Permanent lesions are still occurring in about one in a hundred, despite standardized surgical approach to the nerve and the availability of recurrent laryngeal nerve monitoring. Intraoperative recurrent laryngeal nerve monitoring is based on the visual or acoustic registration of evoked electromyography of the laryngeal muscles. Primarily, it proves conductivity of the stimulated nerve segment towards the muscle, so that stimulation distal of the lesion should show persistent electromyographic response.

Methods

In a porcine model, an iatrogenic nerve lesion of the recurrent laryngeal nerve was set. Subsequently, the proximal and distal dissected nerve portion was stimulated and the evoked electromyographic response of the laryngeal muscles was recorded by needle and laryngeal surface electrodes.

Results

As expected, no signal was obtained from the proximal segment. Meanwhile, the distal segment showed unchanged amplitude of the electrophysiological response for the observation period of more than 1 h.

Conclusion

This result demonstrated a remarkable pitfall for the neuromuscular monitoring at the recurrent laryngeal nerve: In the human surgical setting, this might have resulted in the false assumption of an anatomical intact nerve. The persistence of distal electromyographic conduction strengthens the proposal to stimulate the vagal nerve as the proximal portion of the nerve as a part of a systematic protocol.
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Metadaten
Titel
Electromyographic response persists after peripheral transection: endorsement of current concepts in recurrent laryngeal nerve monitoring in a porcine model
verfasst von
Torsten Birkholz
Andrea Irouschek
Dirk Labahn
Peter Klein
Joachim Schmidt
Publikationsdatum
01.02.2010
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery / Ausgabe 2/2010
Print ISSN: 1435-2443
Elektronische ISSN: 1435-2451
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00423-009-0570-0

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