Abstract
Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBA) facilitate endotracheal intubation and reduce related laryngeal morbidity. However, NMBA interfere with intraoperative neuromonitoring amplitudes during thyroidectomy. The goal of this study was to evaluate the impact of rocuronium used for tracheal intubation on early intraoperative neuromonitoring vagal amplitudes observed during first thyroid lobe dissection. This is an observational pharmacoepidemiological study with prospective data collection and retrospective analysis. During the study period, all consecutive patients who underwent thyroid surgery with neuromonitoring were included. Patients underwent endotracheal intubation either using a single dose of rocuronium (NMBA group) or without NMBA (NMBA-free group) according to the anesthesiologist's preference. Six hundred six patients were included (213 NMBA and393 NMBA-free group patients). At V1, 39 patients (18%) in the NMBA group had an amplitude < 100µV (need for curarization reversal in 30 patients) and 13 patients (3.3%) in the NMBA-free group (p < 0.001). In the remaining 554 patients, the mean V1 amplitude was significantly decreased in the NMBA group (544 versus 685µV; p < 0.001). After exclusion of 25 patients with loss of signal types 1 and 2 during dissection, the difference between mean V1 and mean V2 was significantly lower in NMBA group patients (- 22 versus - 86µV; p = 0.016). This study provides new data showing how NMBA used for tracheal intubation significantly decrease V1 amplitude baseline and modify amplitude variations from V1 to V2 values during the first thyroid lobe dissection. Pharmacoepidemiological study.
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