• Br J Neurosurg · Dec 2001

    Intraoperative monitoring of facial EMG responses during microvascular decompression for hemifacial spasm. Prognostic value for long-term outcome: a study in a 33-patient series.

    • J Hatem, M Sindou, and C Vial.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Hopital Neurologique P. Wertheimer, University of Lyon, France.
    • Br J Neurosurg. 2001 Dec 1;15(6):496-9.

    AbstractLateral spread responses (LSR), an electrophysiological characteristic of hemifacial spasm (HFS), can be recorded during surgery. This work aims at evaluating the prognostic value of the persistence or suppression of the LSR at the end of the microvascular decompression (MVD) procedure of the facial nerve. Thirty-three patients with HFS, which had been evolving for 5.5 years, underwent MVD with intraoperative EMG. Monitoring required the placement of a needle in the frontalis and mentalis muscles. Responses were recorded after stimulation of inferior or superior branches of the facial nerve to search for abnormal ephaptic LSR. Preoperative abnormal LSRs were present in all patients. In 23 patients, LSR disappeared with vascular decompression and was not present upon closure. Among those patients, 20 were considered clinically cured and three still presented with mild/moderate spasm at 3-month follow-up. At late follow-up, 22 patients were free of spasm. One patient had recurrence of spasm at month 10. On the contrary, 10 patients had persistent abnormal LSR upon closure. Among those, seven were cured at early follow-up (3 months on average), whereas spasm disappeared at late follow-up (12 to 36 months) in the other three patients. The prognostic value of LSR monitoring is questionable; a good clinical result may be obtained in patients who presented with persistent LSR at the end of MVD. Delayed cure strongly supports the hypothesis that HFS is not only due to the mechanical pulsations of the elongated artery against the root exit zone of the facial nerve, but also to demyelination of the nerve and/or hyperactivity of the facial motornucleus generated by the neurovascular compression.

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