Has intraoperative neuromonitoring changed the surgery for unruptured middle cerebral artery aneurysms? A retrospective comparative study

Author:

Skrap BenjaminORCID,Di Bonaventura RinaORCID,Di Domenico MicheleORCID,Sturiale Carmelo LucioORCID,Auricchio Anna MariaORCID,Maugeri RosarioORCID,Giammalva Giuseppe RobertoORCID,Iacopino Domenico GerardoORCID,Olivi AlessandroORCID,Marchese EnricoORCID,Albanese AlessioORCID

Abstract

AbstractIntraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM) represents one of the available technologies able to assess ischemia and aimed to improve surgical outcome reducing the treatment related morbidity in surgery for intracranial aneurysms. Many studies analyzing the impact of IONM are poised by the heterogeneity bias affecting the cohorts. We report our experience with IONM for surgery of unruptured middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysm in order to highlight its influence on functional and radiological outcome and surgical strategy. We retrospectively reviewed all MCA unruptured aneurysms treated between January 2013 and June 2021 by our institutional neurovascular team. Patients were divided into 2 groups according to the use of IONM. A total of 153 patients were included in the study, 52 operated on without IONM and 101 with IONM. The groups did not differ preoperatively regarding clinical status and aneurysm characteristics. Patients operated with IONM had better functional outcomes at discharge as well as at follow-up (p= 0.048, p=0.041) due to lower symptomatic ischemia and better radiological outcome due to lower rate of unexpected aneurysmal remnants (p= 0.0173). The introduction of IONM changed the use of temporary clipping (TeC), increasing its average duration (p= 0.01) improving the safety of dissecting and clipping the aneurysm. IONM in surgery for unruptured MCA aneurysm could improve the efficacy and safety of clipping strategy in the way it showed a role in changing the use of TeC and was associated to the reduction of unexpected aneurysmal remnants’ rate and improvement in both short- and long-term patient’s outcome.

Funder

Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery

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