<- Back to digest

Spine Journal - 2026-04-13 - Journal Article

Do the waveform transition patterns after intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring alerts indicate the postoperative neurological outcomes after spinal correction surgery?

Liu W, Qiu J, Li Y, Mao S, Liu Z, Sun X, Zhu Z, Qiu Y, Shi B

retrospective cohortLOE IVn = 37 (from a base cohort of 1,994)24 months

Topics

spine
PMID: 41985685DOI: 10.1016/j.spinee.2026.04.014View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Among 37 patients with significant IONM alerts during spinal deformity surgery, 91.7% of those with initial neurological deficits achieved favorable outcomes at 24 months, with waveform recovery pattern predicting both deficit severity and recovery trajectory.

Summary Depth

Choose how much analysis to show on this article page.

Summary

This single-center retrospective study classified IONM waveform transition patterns in 37 of 1,994 deformity surgery patients (1.9% alert rate) into five categories based on waveform recovery (full, partial, none) and postoperative neurological status. Pattern C1 (no recovery, partial deficit) was most common at 32.4%, followed by Pattern B2 (partial recovery, partial deficit) at 24.3%. All Pattern B2 patients recovered within 6 months, while Pattern C patients required up to 24 months, and 91.7% of all deficit patients achieved favorable outcomes.

Key Limitation

The sample size of 37 patients across five subgroups (minimum n=3 for Pattern C2) makes all risk factor associations statistically underpowered and the five-pattern classification unvalidated in an independent cohort.

Original Abstract

BACKGROUND CONTEXT

Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM) alerts during spinal deformity surgery require timely intervention, but the prognostic significance of different waveform transition patterns following these alerts remains inadequately characterized.

PURPOSE

This study aimed to classify IONM waveform transition patterns after critical alerts and evaluate their association with immediate and long-term postoperative neurological outcomes.

STUDY DESIGN

A single-center retrospective cohort study.

PATIENT SAMPLE

Thirty-seven out of 1994 patients (1.9%) who experienced significant IONM alerts during spinal deformity correction surgery between July 2015 and June 2022.

OUTCOME MEASURES

Physiologic Measures: IONM waveform recovery (full, partial, or none). Functional Measures: Neurological status (no deficit, partial deficit, or complete paralysis) assessed immediately postoperation and during 24-month follow-up.

METHODS

Patients were categorized into five distinct IONM patterns based on waveform recovery dynamics and postoperative neurological status. Demographic, surgical, and radiographic factors were compared across groups. Due to the small sample size, analyses were primarily descriptive. Between-group comparisons were performed using Fisher's exact test for categorical variables..

RESULTS

Five waveform patterns were identified: Pattern A (full recovery, no deficits; 21.6%), B1 (partial recovery, no deficits; 13.5%), B2 (partial recovery, partial deficits; 24.3%), C1 (no recovery, partial deficits; 32.4%), and C2 (no recovery, complete paralysis; 8.1%). Exploratory analyses suggested that global kyphosis >90°, alerts during osteotomy, three-column osteotomy, blood loss >3000 mL, and preoperative spinal cord abnormalities were more frequent in patients with irreversible alerts and deficits. At 2-year follow-up, 91.7% of patients with initial neurological deficits showed improvement, suggesting that IONM waveform recovery may be associated with favorable neurological prognosis.

CONCLUSIONS

IONM waveform transition patterns following critical alerts demonstrate an significant association with postoperative neurological outcomes. Recovery trajectories varied across patterns: all Pattern B2 patients recovered within 6 months, while Pattern C patients showed gradual improvement over 24 months, with 91.7% of affected patients achieving favorable outcomes by 24-month follow-up, underscoring the importance of timely intervention during spinal deformity surgery.