Der Chirurg; Zeitschrift für alle Gebiete der operativen Medizen
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Intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) has yielded an increasing effect on thyroid surgery. During IONM, the recurrent laryngeal nerve is stimulated electrically and an acoustically transformed electromyographic signal is derived via either a needle electrode placed in the vocalis muscle or an electrode adjusted to the intubation tube. The IONM is used for identifying and predicting the function of the recurrent laryngeal nerve. ⋯ The reliability of the IONM signal (defined as the correlation between intraoperative signal interpretation and postoperative vocal cord function) is reflected by a specificity as high as 98.2%, as shown by German multicenter studies. Thus, normal vocal cord function could be demonstrated postoperatively in over 98.2% of patients with intraoperatively unchanged neuromonitoring signals. If the neuromonitoring signal changed during operation, 39% of the patients suffered from transient vocal cord immobility and 12% had permanent loss of vocal cord function.