Acta neurochirurgica
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 1991
Sensory and motor trigeminal evoked potentials to localize the position of trigeminal electrodes.
Analysis of verbal responses to electrical stimulation of the trigeminal ganglion and rootlets has been the only method available so far to localize the electrode tip in the most appropriate trigeminal division or division segment, prior to thermocoagulation during percutaneous treatment for trigeminal neuralgia. A diversity of factors may lead to unreliable verbal responses, resulting in increased morbidity or even therapeutic failure. In an attempt to enhance the accuracy of electrode localization during Sweet's procedure, we describe an electrophysiological method complementary to clinical responses. ⋯ STEPs and MTEPs showed appropriate correlation with verbal and clinical motor responses at each electrode site. General anaesthesia failed to affect STEPs. Systematic exploration in the awake patient of both verbal and clinical motor responses, together with STEPs and MTEPs, is therefore recommended prior to the induction of radiofrequency lesions in the course of percutaneous treatment for trigeminal neuralgia.
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Cranio-cervical stabilization using preformed Luque rectangles supplemented by autologous bone grafts was performed in 18 patients. Stability at the cranio-cervical junction had been impaired by a number of diseases including rheumatoid arthritis in 12 patients. ⋯ Surgery related complications were rare, although, considering the patient population treated, medical and anaesthesiological complications as a result of accompanying diseases may pose serious problems. The technical details of the surgical procedure are described and its application for the treatment of cranio-cervical instability is discussed.