Bilateral and Optimistic Warning Paradigms Improve the Predictive Power of Intraoperative Facial Motor Evoked Potentials during Vestibular Schwannoma Surgery.
Tobias GreveLiang WangSophie KatzendoblerLucas L GeyerChristian SchichorJörg Christian TonnAndrea SzelényiPublished in: Cancers (2021)
Facial muscle corticobulbar motor evoked potentials (FMcoMEPs) are used to monitor facial nerve integrity during vestibular schwannoma resections to increase maximal safe tumor resection. Established warning criteria, based on ipsilateral amplitude reduction, have the limitation that the rate of false positive alarms is high, in part because FMcoMEP changes occur on both sides, e.g., due to brain shift or pneumocephalus. We retrospectively compared the predictive value of ipsilateral-only warning criteria and actual intraoperative warnings with a novel candidate warning criterion, based on "ipsilateral versus contralateral difference in relative stimulation threshold increase, from baseline to end of resection" (BilatMT ≥ 20%), combined with an optimistic approach in which a warning would be triggered only if all facial muscles on the affected side deteriorated. We included 60 patients who underwent resection of vestibular schwannoma. The outcome variable was postoperative facial muscle function. Retrospectively applying BilatMT, with the optimistic approach, was found to have a significantly better false positive rate, which was much lower (9% at day 90) than the traditionally used ipsilateral warning criteria (>20%) and was also lower than actual intraoperative warnings. This is the first report combining the threshold method with an optimistic approach in a bilateral multi-facial muscle setup. This method could substantially reduce the rate of false positive alarms in FMcoMEP monitoring.
Keyphrases
- soft tissue
- skeletal muscle
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- resting state
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- functional connectivity
- white matter
- peritoneal dialysis
- atrial fibrillation
- hearing loss
- body composition
- heart rate
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- coronary artery disease
- patient reported outcomes
- patient reported
- surgical site infection