Anchoring Depth Electrodes for Bedside Removal

Author:

Gross Robert E.1,Rowland Nathan C.2,Sung Edward K.3,LaBorde David V.1,Suleiman Shadeah L.45

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurosurgery, Atlanta, Georgia

2. Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California

3. Departments of Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia

4. Department of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia

5. Department of Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND: Intracranial depth electrodes for epilepsy are easily dislodged during long-term monitoring unless adequately anchored, but a technique is not available that is both secure and allows easy explantation without reopening the incision. OBJECTIVE: To describe a convenient and inexpensive method for anchoring depth electrodes that prevents migration and incidental pullout while allowing electrode removal at the bedside. METHODS: An easily breakable suture (eg, MONOCRYL) is tied around both the depth electrode and a heavy nylon suture and anchored to a hole at the edge of the burr hole; the tails of both are tunneled together percutaneously. The “break-away” MONOCRYL suture effectively anchors the electrode for as long as needed. At the completion of the intracranial electroencephalography session, the 2 tails of the nylon suture are pulled to break their encompassing MONOCRYL anchor suture, thus freeing the depth electrode for easy removal. RESULTS: The break-away depth electrode anchoring technique was used for 438 electrodes in 68 patients, followed by explantation of these and associated strip electrodes without reopening the incision. Only 1 electrode (0.2%) migrated spontaneously, and 3 depth electrodes (0.7%) fractured in 2 patients (2.9%) on explantation, necessitating open surgery to remove them in 1 of the patients (1.5%). CONCLUSION: An easy and inexpensive anchoring configuration for depth electrodes is described that provides an effective and safe means of securing the electrodes while allowing easy explantation at the bedside.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

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