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Intraoperative neuromonitoring for the early detection and prevention of RLN traction injury in thyroid surgery: A porcine model

Authors
Wu, Che-WeiDionigi, GianlorenzoSun, HuiLiu, XiaoliKim, Hoon YubHsiao, Pi-JungTsai, Kuo-BowChen, Hui-ChunChen, Hsiu-YaChang, Pi-YingLu, I-ChengChiang, Feng-Yu
Issue Date
2월-2014
Publisher
MOSBY-ELSEVIER
Citation
SURGERY, v.155, no.2, pp.329 - 339
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
SURGERY
Volume
155
Number
2
Start Page
329
End Page
339
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/99407
DOI
10.1016/j.surg.2013.08.015
ISSN
0039-6060
Abstract
Background. Operative traction of the thyroid lobe is a necessary component of thyroid surgery. This surgical maneuver can cause traction injury of the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN), and this complication has been reported to be the most common mechanism of nerve injury. The goal of this study was to investigate the electromyographic (EMG) signal pattern during an acute RLN traction injury and establish reliable strategies to prevent the injury using intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM). Methods. Fifteen piglets (30 RLNs) underwent IONM via automated periodic vagal nerve stimulation and had their EMG tracings recorded and correlated with various models of nerve injury. Results. In the pilot study, a progressive, partial EMC loss was observed under RLN tractions with different tension (n = 8). The changes in amplitudes were more marked and consistent than were the changes in latency. The EMG gradually gained partial recovery after the traction was relieved. Among the nerves injured with electrothermal (n = 4), clamping (n = I), and transection (n = 1) models, the EMG showed immediate partial or complete loss, and no gradual EMG recovery was observed. Another 16 RLNs were used to investigate the potential of EMG recovery after different extents of RLN traction. We noted the EMG showed nearly full recovery if the traction stress was relieved before the loss of signal (LOS), but the recovery was worse if prolonged or repeated traction was applied. The mean restored amplitudes after the traction was relieved before, during, and after the LOS were 98 +/- 3% (n = 6), 36 +/- 4% (n = 4), and 15 2% (n = 6), respectively. Conclusion. RLN traction injury showed graded, partial EMG changes; early release of the traction before the EMG has degraded to LOS offers a good chance of EMG recovery. IONM can be used as a tool for the early detection of adverse EMG changes that may alert surgeons to correct certain maneuvers immediately to prevent irreversible nerve injury during the thyroid operation.
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