OBJECTIVE: to relate changes in somatosensory-evoked potentials (SEPs) with onset of neurological deficits in patients having carotid endarterectomy (CEA) under locoregional anaesthesia. METHODS: a prospective study of 50 consecutive patients. RESULTS: SEPs yielded an accuracy of 98%, specificity 100%, and sensitivity 89%. In all concordant cases the onset of a neurological deficit in awake patients corresponded to a 30--40% reduction in amplitude of N20-P25 waveforms. After shunting, the N20-P25 took 2--3 min to return to normal. CONCLUSIONS: SEPs are associated with a 2% false negative rate. Their threshold for detecting cerebral ischaemia is lower than the currently reported value for patients under general anaesthesia. The time needed for evoked potentials (2--3 min) to return to normal after shunting limits their usefulness in verifying effective shunting. Copyright 2001 Harcourt Publishers Limited.
OBJECTIVE: to relate changes in somatosensory-evoked potentials (SEPs) with onset of neurological deficits in patients having carotid endarterectomy (CEA) under locoregional anaesthesia. METHODS: a prospective study of 50 consecutive patients. RESULTS: SEPs yielded an accuracy of 98%, specificity 100%, and sensitivity 89%. In all concordant cases the onset of a neurological deficit in awake patients corresponded to a 30--40% reduction in amplitude of N20-P25 waveforms. After shunting, the N20-P25 took 2--3 min to return to normal. CONCLUSIONS: SEPs are associated with a 2% false negative rate. Their threshold for detecting cerebral ischaemia is lower than the currently reported value for patients under general anaesthesia. The time needed for evoked potentials (2--3 min) to return to normal after shunting limits their usefulness in verifying effective shunting. Copyright 2001 Harcourt Publishers Limited.
Authors: Thomas Rössel; Christopher Uhlig; Jörg Pietsch; Stefan Ludwig; Thea Koch; Torsten Richter; Peter Markus Spieth; Stephan Kersting Journal: BMC Anesthesiol Date: 2019-11-26 Impact factor: 2.217