| Literature DB >> 20165679 |
Vishal K Kundnani1, Lisa Zhu, Hh Tak, Hk Wong.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multimodal intraoperative neuromonitoring is recommended during corrective spinal surgery, and has been widely used in surgery for spinal deformity with successful outcomes. Despite successful outcomes of corrective surgery due to increased safety of the patients with the usage of spinal cord monitoring in many large spine centers, this modality has not yet achieved widespread popularity. We report the analysis of prospectively collected intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring data of 354 consecutive patients undergoing corrective surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) to establish the efficacy of multimodal neuromonitoring and to evaluate comparative sensitivity and specificity.Entities:
Keywords: Neuromonitoring; neurogenic motor-evoked potentials; scoliosis; somatosensory-evoked potentials
Year: 2010 PMID: 20165679 PMCID: PMC2822422 DOI: 10.4103/0019-5413.58608
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Orthop ISSN: 0019-5413 Impact factor: 1.251
Definitions of statistically significant alerts
| True-positive alert | Significant alert in NMEP/SSEP signals indicative of an ‘evolving’ injury that (1) was irreversible despite all interventional measures and was followed by a postoperative neurologic deficit or (2) responded favorably to intervention (improved to within 25% of the initial stable baseline value) |
| False-positive alert | Significant alert that could not be reversed to within 25% of the stable value, but the patient awoke without any postoperative sensory and/or motor deficit |
| True-negative alert | No critical changes and the patient awoke neurologically intact |
| False-negative alert | Patient awoke with a new neurologic deficit with (1) No significant change in NMEP/SSEP (2) a relevant signal change had resolved to within 25% of baseline following intervention |
Demographic data of AIS cases undergoing neuromonitoring in relation to significant alerts
| Without signal alerts | With signal alerts | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 13.6 years (8–18 years) | 14.1 years |
| Sex | M : F = 42 : 299 | M : F = 3 : 10 |
| Average weight | 41 kg | 37 kg |
| Average height | 131 cm | 135 cm |
| Body mass index | 23.5 (21–28) | 23.9 |
| Curve characteristics | ||
| Average magnitude | 48° (40–108) | 55° (45–89) |
| Average Rissers | Grade 3 | Grade 3 |
| Curve type (Lenke) | ||
| Type 1 | 112 | 2 |
| Type 2 | 23 | 3 |
| Type 3 | 78 | 3 |
| Type 4 | 16 | 2 |
| Type 5 | 67 | 1 |
| Type 6 | 45 | 2 |
Surgical procedures performed
| Total | 354 |
| Anterior | 30 |
| Posterior | 302 |
| Anterior + posterior | 22 |
Significant neuromonitoring alerts
| Only SSEP alert | Only NMEP alert | SSEP + NMEP alert | No SSEP/NMEP alert | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Without | 0 | 5 | 6 | 341 |
| postoperative | ||||
| neurological | ||||
| deficit | ||||
| With | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| postoperative | ||||
| neurological | ||||
| deficit |
SSEP - Somatosensory-evoked potentials, NMEP - Neurogenic motor-evoked potentials
Sensitivity and specificity of neuromonitoring in AIS
| SSEP % | NMEP % | SSEP + NMEP % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 51 | 100 | 100 |
| Specificity | 100 | 96 | 99 |
Figure 1A case of a 16-year-old female patient with double major curve (Lenke type) right thoracic T3–T11 = 86° curve and thoracolumbar T11–L4 = 78° curve with normal baseline monitoring parameters. Significant alert was noticed with decline in both SSEP and NMEP signals during intraoperative corrective maneuver. Reversal action was started. However, only partial recovery of signals was detected. Patient had postoperative neurological deficit (Paraparesis - Frankel B)