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Facial Nerve Monitoring in Middle Ear and Mastoid Surgery
Author(s) -
Noss Roger S.,
Lalwani Anil K.,
Yingling Charles D.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the laryngoscope
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1531-4995
pISSN - 0023-852X
DOI - 10.1097/00005537-200105000-00014
Subject(s) - medicine , facial nerve , operating microscope , dissection (medical) , facial paralysis , neuroma , surgery , dehiscence , temporal bone , intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring , acoustic neuroma , middle ear
Hypothesis Intraoperative electromyographic facial nerve monitoring, long accepted as the standard of care in surgery for acoustic neuroma and other cerebellopontine angle tumors, may be of aid in middle ear and mastoid surgery. Study Design Retrospective series of 262 cases of middle ear/mastoid surgery in which monitoring was performed by a neurophysiologist. Methods Neurophysiological monitoring events were classified as mechanical or electrical. The voltages producing facial nerve stimulation were compiled and compared with observed facial nerve dehiscence. Results The most common use of monitoring was localization of the facial nerve by electrical stimulation (60%) or identification of mechanically evoked activity (39%). In 57 cases (36%), the first electrical stimulation event evoked a facial nerve response at less than 1 V threshold, indicating little or no bony covering. The minimum stimulation threshold throughout each of these cases was less than 1 V in 88 of the 159 cases (55%) in which stimulation was attempted. In contrast, the facial nerve was visibly dehiscent in only 35 cases (13%). Neurophysiological monitoring confirmed aberrant facial nerve course through the temporal bone in four cases resulting in cancellation of surgical treatment in two cases. Postoperative facial nerve function was preserved in all cases when present preoperatively. Conclusions An electrical stimulation threshold of less than 1 V is a more useful criterion of dehiscence than observation under the operating microscope. The absence of monitoring events allows safe dissection. Monitoring can help locate the facial nerve, guide the dissection and drilling, and confirm its integrity, thereby allowing more definitive surgical treatment while preserving neural function.