Department of Biomedical Engineering, Vanderbilt University, 5824 Stevenson Center, Station B, Box 351631, Nashville, TN, 37235-1631, USA.
Vanderbilt Biophotonics Center, 410 24th Ave. South, Nashville, TN, 37232, USA.
Sci Rep. 2023 Mar 16;13(1):4362. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-31384-3.
In surgical procedures where the risk of accidental nerve damage is prevalent, surgeons commonly use electrical stimulation (ES) during intraoperative nerve monitoring (IONM) to assess a nerve's functional integrity. ES, however, is subject to off-target stimulation and stimulation artifacts disguising the true functionality of the specific target and complicating interpretation. Lacking a stimulation artifact and having a higher degree of spatial specificity, infrared neural stimulation (INS) has the potential to improve upon clinical ES for IONM. Here, we present a direct comparison between clinical ES and INS for IONM performance in an in vivo rat model. The sensitivity of INS surpasses that of ES in detecting partial forms of damage while maintaining a comparable specificity and sensitivity to more complete forms. Without loss in performance, INS is readily compatible with existing clinical nerve monitoring systems. These findings underscore the clinical potential of INS to improve IONM and surgical outcomes.
在手术过程中,意外神经损伤的风险普遍存在,外科医生通常在术中神经监测 (IONM) 期间使用电刺激 (ES) 来评估神经的功能完整性。然而,ES 容易受到非靶向刺激和刺激伪影的影响,这些伪影会掩盖特定目标的真实功能,并使解释变得复杂。缺乏刺激伪影且具有更高空间特异性的红外神经刺激 (INS) 有可能改善 IONM 的临床 ES。在这里,我们在体内大鼠模型中直接比较了 INS 和 ES 在 IONM 性能方面的表现。INS 在检测部分损伤形式时的灵敏度超过了 ES,同时对更完全的损伤形式保持了可比的特异性和灵敏度。在不影响性能的情况下,INS 很容易与现有的临床神经监测系统兼容。这些发现强调了 INS 改善 IONM 和手术结果的临床潜力。