Sturm Joshua J, Lee Clara H, Modik Oleg, Suurna Maria V
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York.
Department of Neurology, Division of Clinical Neurophysiology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York.
J Clin Sleep Med. 2020 Oct 15;16(10):1769-1774. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.8694.
The effectiveness of hypoglossal nerve stimulation (HGNS) in the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) depends on the selective stimulation of nerve fibers that innervate the tongue muscles that produce tongue protrusion (genioglossus) and stiffening (transverse/vertical) while avoiding fibers that innervate muscles that produce tongue retraction (styloglossus/hyoglossus). Postoperative treatment failures can be related to mixed activation of retractor and protrusor muscles, despite intraoperative efforts to identify and avoid nerve fibers that innervate the retractor muscles. This study describes a novel intraoperative protocol that more optimally identifies mixed activation by utilizing an expanded set of stimulation/recording parameters.
This study was a case series in a university hospital setting of patients undergoing unilateral hypoglossal nerve stimulation implantation for obstructive sleep apnea. Data included electromyographic responses in the genioglossus and styloglossus/hyoglossus to intraoperative stimulation with an implantable pulse generator using unipolar (- - -, o-o) and bipolar (+-+) settings.
In a subset of patients (3/55), low-intensity unipolar implantable pulse generator stimulation revealed significant mixed activation of the styloglossus/hyoglossus and genioglossus muscles that was not evident under standard bipolar implantable pulse generator stimulation conditions. Additional surgical dissection and repositioning of the electrode stimulation cuff reduced mixed activation.
A novel intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring protocol was able to detect significant mixed activation during hypoglossal nerve stimulation that was otherwise absent using standard parameters. This enabled successful electrode cuff repositioning and a dramatic reduction of mixed activation.
舌下神经刺激术(HGNS)治疗阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的有效性取决于对支配产生舌前突(颏舌肌)和舌变硬(横向/纵向)的舌肌的神经纤维进行选择性刺激,同时避免刺激支配产生舌回缩(茎突舌肌/舌骨舌肌)的肌肉的神经纤维。尽管术中努力识别并避免刺激支配回缩肌的神经纤维,但术后治疗失败可能与回缩肌和前突肌的混合激活有关。本研究描述了一种新的术中方案,该方案通过利用一组扩展的刺激/记录参数,能更优化地识别混合激活。
本研究是一项在大学医院进行的病例系列研究,纳入了因阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停接受单侧舌下神经刺激植入术的患者。数据包括使用植入式脉冲发生器,在单极(---, o-o)和双极(+-+)设置下,颏舌肌和茎突舌肌/舌骨舌肌对术中刺激的肌电图反应。
在一部分患者(3/55)中,低强度单极植入式脉冲发生器刺激显示茎突舌肌/舌骨舌肌和颏舌肌存在明显的混合激活,而在标准双极植入式脉冲发生器刺激条件下并不明显。额外的手术解剖和重新定位电极刺激袖带减少了混合激活。
一种新的术中神经生理监测方案能够检测到舌下神经刺激过程中明显的混合激活,而使用标准参数时则无法检测到。这使得电极袖带能够成功重新定位,并显著减少混合激活。