Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society
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Intraoperative neurophysiologic monitoring endeavors to preserve the integrity of the nervous system at a time of potential risk. The examination of language function in the operative setting is a unique task that requires a detailed and systematic approach to be carried out efficiently and reliably in this dynamic environment. ⋯ This technique requires a coordinated effort to testing, which is reliant on preoperative assessment and structured approach to functional cortical mapping by the surgical, anesthetic, and neurophysiology teams. Despite the intricate nature of this modality of testing, the accurate identification of language areas facilitates neurosurgeries for tumor and focal epilepsy syndromes in the dominant cerebral hemisphere, which depend on maximal margins of resection for best outcomes.
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J Clin Neurophysiol · Dec 2013
Simultaneous direct cortical motor evoked potential monitoring and subcortical mapping for motor pathway preservation during brain tumor surgery: is it useful?
The warning-sign hierarchy between quantitative subcortical motor mapping and continuous motor evoked potential monitoring during resection of supratentorial brain tumors: clinical article.Seidel K, Beck J, Steiglitz L, Schucht P, Raabe A.J Neurosurg 2013; 118:287-296. ⋯ Mapping should primarily guide tumor resection adjacent to the CST. Direct cortical stimulation-motor evoked potential is a useful predictor of deficits, but its value as a warning sign is limited because signal alterations were reversible in only approximately 60% of the present cases and irreversibility is a post hoc definition. The true safe mapping MT is lower than previously thought. The authors postulate a mapping MT of 1 mA or less where irreversible DCS-MEP changes and motor deficits regularly occur. Therefore, they recommend stopping tumor resection at an MT of 2 mA at the latest. The limited spatial and temporal coverage of contemporary mapping may increase error and may contribute to false, higher MTs.