Adhesive surface electrodes versus needle-based neuromonitoring in lumbar spinal surgery

Author:

Chintapalli Renuka1,Pangal Dhiraj2,Cavagnaro Maria-Jose2,Guinle Maria Isabel Barros2,Johnstone Thomas2,Ratliff John2

Affiliation:

1. School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom,

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, United States.

Abstract

Background: The relative safety and more widespread utility of an adhesive surface electrode-based neuromonitoring (ABM) system may reduce the time and cost of traditional needle-based neuromonitoring (NBM). Methods: This retrospective cohort review included one- and two-level transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion procedures (2019–2023). The primary variables studied included were time (in minutes) from patient entry into the operating room (OR) to incision, time from patient entry into the OR to closure, and time from incision to closure. Univariate and bivariate analyses were performed to compare the outcomes between the ABM (31 patients) and NBM (51 patients) modalities. Results: We found no significant differences in the time from patient entry into the OR to incision (ABM: 71.8, NBM: 70.3, P = 0.70), time from patient entry into the OR to closure (ABM: 284.2, NBM: 301.7, P = 0.27), or time from incision to closure (ABM: 212.4, NBM: 231.4, P = 0.17) between the two groups. Further, no patients from either group required reoperation for mal-positioned instrumentation, and none sustained a new postoperative neurological deficit. The ABM approach did, however, allow for a reduction in neurophysiologist-workforce and neuromonitoring costs. Conclusion: The introduction of the ABM system did not lower surgical time but did demonstrate similar efficacy and clinical outcomes, with reduced clinical invasiveness, neurophysiologist-associated workforce, and overall neuromonitoring cost compared to NBM.

Publisher

Scientific Scholar

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