Intraoperative cortical stimulation mapping with laryngeal electromyography for the localization of human laryngeal motor cortex

Author:

Ammanuel Simon G.1,Kondapavulur Sravani2,Lu Alex Y.2,Breshears Jonathan D.3,Clark John P.4,Silva Alexander B.2,Chang Edward F.25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin;

2. Departments of Neurological Surgery and

3. Marion Bloch Neuroscience Institute, Saint Luke’s Hospital, Kansas City, Missouri; and

4. Surgical Neurophysiology, University of California, San Francisco, California;

5. Center for Integrative Neuroscience, University of California, San Francisco, California

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The objectives of this study were to describe the authors’ clinical methodology and outcomes for mapping the laryngeal motor cortex (LMC) and define localization of the LMC in a cohort of neurosurgical patients undergoing intraoperative brain mapping. Because of mapping variability across patients, the authors aimed to define the probabilistic distribution of cortical sites that evoke laryngeal movement, as well as adjacent cortical somatotopic representations for the face (mouth), tongue, and hand. METHODS Thirty-six patients underwent left (n = 18) or right (n = 18) craniotomy with asleep motor mapping. For each patient, electromyography (EMG) electrodes were placed in the face, tongue, and hand; a nerve integrity monitor (NIM) endotracheal tube with surface electrodes detected EMG activity from the bilateral vocal folds. After dense cortical stimulation was delivered throughout the sensorimotor cortex, motor responses were then mapped onto a three-dimensional reconstruction of the patient’s cortical surfaces for location characterization of the evoked responses. Finally, stimulation sites were transformed into a two-dimensional coordinate system for probabilistic mapping of the stimulation site relative to the central sulcus and sylvian fissure. RESULTS The authors found that the LMC was predominantly localized to a mid precentral gyrus region, dorsal to face representation and surrounding a transverse sulcus ventral to the hand knob. In 14 of 36 patients, the authors identified additional laryngeal responses located ventral to all orofacial representations, providing evidence for dual LMC representations. CONCLUSIONS The authors determined the probabilistic distribution of the LMC. Cortical stimulation mapping with an NIM endotracheal tube is an easy and effective method for mapping the LMC and is simply integrated into the current neuromonitoring methods for brain mapping.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Reference42 articles.

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2. The voice and laryngeal dysfunction in stroke: a report from the Neurolaryngology Subcommittee of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery;Altman KW,2007

3. Laryngeal motor cortex and control of speech in humans;Simonyan K,2011

4. Human primary motor cortex shows hemispheric specialization for speech;Terumitsu M,2006

5. Cortical sensorimotor control in vocalization: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study;Olthoff A,2008

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