Title of article :
2014 Neer Award Paper: Neuromonitoring the Latarjet procedure
Author/Authors :
Delaney، نويسنده , , Ruth A. and Freehill، نويسنده , , Michael T. and Janfaza، نويسنده , , David R. and Vlassakov، نويسنده , , Kamen V. and Higgins، نويسنده , , Laurence D. and Warner، نويسنده , , Jon J.P.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
Background
d intraoperative neuromonitoring to define the stages of the Latarjet procedure during which the nerves are at greatest risk.
s
-four patients with a mean age of 28.4 years were included. The Latarjet procedure was divided into 9 defined stages. Bilateral median and ulnar somatosensory evoked responses and transcranial motor evoked potentials from all arm myotomes were continuously monitored. A “nerve alert” was defined as averaged 50% amplitude attenuation or 10% latency prolongation of ipsilateral somatosensory evoked responses and transcranial motor evoked potentials. For each nerve alert, the surgeon altered retractor placement, and if there was no response to this, the position of the operative extremity was then changed.
s
patients, 26 (76.5%) had 45 separate nerve alert episodes. The most common stages of the procedure for a nerve alert to occur were glenoid exposure and graft insertion. The axillary nerve was involved in 35 alerts; the musculocutaneous nerve, in 22. Of the 34 patients, 7 (20.6%) had a clinically detectable nerve deficit postoperatively, all correlated with an intraoperative nerve alert. All cases involved the axillary nerve, and all resolved completely from 28 to 165 days postoperatively. Prior surgery and body mass index were not predictive of a neurologic deficit postoperatively. However, total operative time (P = .042) and duration of the stage of the procedure in which the concordant nerve alert occurred (P = .010) were statistically significant predictors of a postoperative nerve deficit.
sions
rves, in particular the axillary and musculocutaneous nerves, are at risk during the Latarjet procedure, especially during glenoid exposure and graft insertion.
Keywords :
Latarjet procedure , neurologic complications , Axillary nerve , Musculocutaneous Nerve , Instability
Journal title :
Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery
Journal title :
Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery