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Protecting You During Surgery

An extra layer of safety during your procedure

When surgery involves the nervous system, even small changes can matter.

NeuroIOM provides intraoperative neuromonitoring to help protect neural structures during complex procedures, giving your surgical team real-time insight while you’re safely under anesthesia. For patients and families, it means added reassurance when it’s needed most.

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What Is Intraoperative Neuromonitoring?

Intraoperative neuromonitoring, or IOM, is a safety tool used during certain surgeries to track how your nerves are functioning in real time. While your surgeon focuses on the procedure, NeuroIOM monitors signals that can’t be seen. Think of your nerves like electricity.

 

Your surgeon can see the lights and switches, but not the communication happening between them. We watch that communication. If a signal changes during surgery, your surgical team is alerted so they can respond right away. IOM acts like a safety tool in the operating room, helping your care team operate safely while protecting your nerves throughout the surgery.

What This Means for You

Surgery can feel overwhelming, especially when it involves the nervous system. Neuromonitoring adds reassurance by providing continuous feedback during the procedure. At NeuroIOM, patient safety and understanding come first. We believe you deserve clear information and thoughtful care, without unnecessary complexity.

Helps protect nerve function during surgery

Provides early warning if something changes

Supports safer decision-making in real time 

Adds peace of mind for patients and families

Image by Roberto Nickson

NeuroIOM was built around one simple idea: patients benefit most when the entire surgical team is supported.

We work closely with surgeons and hospitals to ensure monitoring is tailored to each procedure, using the technology that best fits the situation, not a one-size-fits-all approach. That flexibility allows us to focus on what matters most: protecting patients and supporting safe outcomes.

If your surgeon has recommended intraoperative neuromonitoring, we’re here to help you understand what to expect and why it may be used.

Questions About Neuromonitoring?

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