Abstract

Background: Placement of the clinical vagus nerve stimulating cuff is a standard surgical procedure based on anatomical landmarks, with limited patient specificity in terms of fascicular organization or vagal anatomy. As such, the therapeutic effects are generally limited by unwanted side effects of neck muscle contractions, demonstrated by previous studies to result from stimulation of (1) motor fibers near the cuff in the superior laryngeal and (2) motor fibers within the cuff projecting to the recurrent laryngeal.Objective: Conventional non-invasive ultrasound, where the transducer is placed on the surface of the skin, has been previously used to visualize the vagus with respect to other landmarks such as the carotid and internal jugular vein. However, it lacks sufficient resolution to provide details about the vagus fascicular organization, or detail about smaller neural structures such as the recurrent and superior laryngeal branch responsible for therapy limiting side effects. Here, we characterize the use of ultrasound with the transducer placed in the surgical pocket to improve resolution without adding significant additional risk to the surgical procedure in the pig model.Methods: Ultrasound images were obtained from a point of known functional organization at the nodose ganglia to the point of placement of stimulating electrodes within the surgical window. Naïve volunteers with minimal training were then asked to use these ultrasound videos to trace afferent groupings of fascicles from the nodose to their location within the surgical window where a stimulating cuff would normally be placed. Volunteers were asked to select a location for epineural electrode placement away from the fascicles containing efferent motor nerves responsible for therapy limiting side effects. 2-D and 3-D reconstructions of the ultrasound were directly compared to post-mortem histology in the same animals.Results: High-resolution ultrasound from the surgical pocket enabled 2-D and 3-D reconstruction of the cervical vagus and surrounding structures that accurately depicted the functional vagotopy of the pig vagus nerve as confirmed via histology. Although resolution was not sufficient to match specific fascicles between ultrasound and histology 1 to 1, it was sufficient to trace fascicle groupings from a point of known functional organization at the nodose ganglia to their locations within the surgical window at stimulating electrode placement. Naïve volunteers were able place an electrode proximal to the sensory afferent grouping of fascicles and away from the motor nerve efferent grouping of fascicles in each subject (n = 3).Conclusion: The surgical pocket itself provides a unique opportunity to obtain higher resolution ultrasound images of neural targets responsible for intended therapeutic effect and limiting off-target effects. We demonstrate the increase in resolution is sufficient to aid patient-specific electrode placement to optimize outcomes. This simple technique could be easily adopted for multiple neuromodulation targets to better understand how patient specific anatomy impacts functional outcomes.

Highlights

  • The therapeutic effects of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) for epilepsy and heart failure, while significant in some patients, are often limited by intolerable side effects including throat tightening or pain, voice changes, hoarseness, cough, and dyspnea (Morris and Mueller, 1999; Howland, 2014)

  • At the completion of ultrasound scanning, the VN was exposed further to identify clearly branches extending from the main trunk, including the sympathetic trunk (ST) which courses parallel to the VN, and the RLN bifurcation at the level of the subclavian artery

  • Vagus nerve stimulation is FDA-approved for several indications, including epilepsy and depression, and holds promise for many other indications

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Summary

Introduction

The therapeutic effects of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) for epilepsy and heart failure, while significant in some patients, are often limited by intolerable side effects including throat tightening or pain, voice changes, hoarseness, cough, and dyspnea (Morris and Mueller, 1999; Howland, 2014). In the nodose ganglia (NG), pseudo-unipolar cell bodies (predominately sensory afferents) are grouped into a large fascicle, distinct from a separate, smaller grouping of nerve fibers This secondary grouping of nerve fibers gives rise to the superior and recurrent laryngeal nerve branches (Settell et al, 2020). This bimodal arrangement of fascicles could be used to strategically place VNS cuffs to avoid the neuronal projections that innervate muscles implicated in side effects. The therapeutic effects are generally limited by unwanted side effects of neck muscle contractions, demonstrated by previous studies to result from stimulation of (1) motor fibers near the cuff in the superior laryngeal and (2) motor fibers within the cuff projecting to the recurrent laryngeal

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