• Otolaryngol. Clin. North Am. · Apr 1992

    Review

    Intraoperative monitoring of facial and cochlear nerves during acoustic neuroma surgery.

    • C D Yingling and J N Gardi.
    • Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco.
    • Otolaryngol. Clin. North Am. 1992 Apr 1; 25 (2): 413-48.

    AbstractThe likelihood of successful preservation of facial and cochlear nerve function during acoustic neuroma surgery has been improved by the advent of intraoperative monitoring techniques. The facial nerve is monitored by recording EMG from facial muscles, with no muscle relaxants used; mechanical irritation of the nerve during surgery causes increased EMG activity, which can be detected in real time using a loudspeaker. Brief episodes of activity associated with specific surgical maneuvers aid the surgeon in avoiding damage to the nerve, whereas prolonged tonic EMG activity may reflect significant neural injury. Electrical stimulation with a hand-held probe elicits evoked EMG responses, which can be used to locate and map the nerve in relation to the tumor. The threshold for eliciting evoked EMG responses provides a rough indicator of the functional status of the nerve. Different nerves in the posterior fossa (trigeminal, facial, spinal accessory) can be identified in multichannel recordings by the spatial distribution and latency of responses to electrical stimulation. The ability to elicit EMG responses from low amplitude stimulation of the facial nerve at the brain stem after tumor removal is a reasonable predictor of postoperative facial function. Cochlear nerve function is assessed by recording the ABR from ear canal and scalp electrodes or the CNAP with an electrode placed directly on the nerve at the brain stem root entry zone. The ABR is a well-known, noninvasive technique that can be adapted to intraoperative use relatively easily but is of limited utility owing to the delay inherent in signal averaging. Direct CNAP recordings require placement of an intracranial electrode in such a way as to contact the cochlear nerve without interfering with surgical access but have the distinct advantage of rapid feedback on changes in cochlear nerve status.

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