Abstract

Triple Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring (IONM) should be considered the standard of care (SOC) for performing cervical surgery for Ossification of the Posterior Longitudinal Ligament (OPLL). IONM's three modalities and their alerts include; Somatosensory Evoked Potentials (SEP: =/> 50% amplitude loss; =/>10% latency loss), Motor Evoked Potentials (MEP: =/> 70% amplitude loss; =/>10-15% latency loss), and Electromyography (loss of EMG, including active triggered EMG (t-EMG)). During cervical OPLL operations, the 3 IONM alerts together better detect intraoperative surgical errors, enabling spine surgeons to immediately institute appropriate resuscitative measures and minimize/avoid permanent neurological deficits/injuries. This focused review of the literature regarding cervical OPLL surgery showed that SEP, MEP, and EMG monitoring used together better reduced the incidence of new nerve root (e.g., mostly C5 but including other root palsies), brachial plexus injuries (i.e., usually occurring during operative positioning), and/or spinal cord injuries (i.e., one study of OPLL patients documented a reduced 3.79% incidence of cord deficits utilizing triple IONM vs. a higher 14.06% frequency of neurological injuries occurring without IONM). Triple IONM (i.e., SEP, MEP, and EMG) should be considered the standard of care (SOC) for performing cervical OPLL surgery. However, the positive impact of IONM on OPLL surgical outcomes critically relies on spinal surgeons' immediate response to SEP, MEP, and/or EMG alerts/significant deterioration with appropriate resuscitative measures to limit/avert permanent neurological deficits.

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