Limitation of intraoperative transcranial electrical stimulation-motor evoked potential monitoring during brain tumor resection adjacent to the primary motor cortex

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Abstract

Transcranial electrical stimulation-motor evoked potential (TES-MEP) is a valuable intraoperative monitoring technique during brain tumor surgery. However, TES can stimulate deep subcortical areas located far from the motor cortex. There is a concern about false-negative results from the use of TES-MEP during resection of those tumors adjacent to the primary motor cortex. Our study reports three cases of TES-MEP monitoring with falsenegative results due to deep axonal stimulation during brain tumor resection. Although no significant change in TES-MEP was observed during surgery, study subjects experienced muscle weakness after surgery. Deep axonal stimulation of TES could give false-negative results. Therefore, a combined method of TES-MEP and direct cortical stimulation-motor evoked potential (DCS-MEP) or direct subcortical stimulation should be considered to overcome the limitation of TES-MEP.

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Do, H. J., Seo, H. G., Oh, B. M., Park, C. K., Kim, J. W., Choi, Y. D., & Lee, S. H. (2018). Limitation of intraoperative transcranial electrical stimulation-motor evoked potential monitoring during brain tumor resection adjacent to the primary motor cortex. Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine, 42(5), 767–772. https://doi.org/10.5535/arm.2018.42.5.767

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