Literature DB >> 23179021

Spinal cord injury from electrocautery: observations in a porcine model using electromyography and motor evoked potentials.

Stanley A Skinner1, Brian Hsu, Ensor E Transfeldt, Amir A Mehbod, David M Rippe, Chunhui Wu, Serkan Erkan.   

Abstract

We have previously investigated electromyographic (EMG) and transcranial motor evoked potential (MEP) abnormalities after mechanical spinal cord injury. We now report thermally generated porcine spinal cord injury, characterized by spinal cord generated hindlimb EMG injury activity and spinal cord motor conduction block (MEP loss). Electrocautery (EC) was delivered to thoracic level dural root sleeves within 6-8 mm of the spinal cord (n = 6). Temperature recordings were made near the spinal cord. EMG and MEP were recorded by multiple gluteobiceps intramuscular electrodes before, during, and after EC. Duration of EC was titrated to an end-point of spinal motor conduction block (MEP loss). In 5/6 roots, ipsilateral EMG injury activity was induced by EC. In 4/5 roots, EMG injury activity was identified before MEP loss. In all roots, a minimum of 20 s EC and a temperature maximum of at least 57 °C at the dural root sleeve were required to induce MEP loss. Unexpectedly, conduction block was preceded by an enhanced MEP in 4/6 trials. EMG injury activity, preceding MEP loss, can be seen during near spinal cord EC. Depolarization and facilitation of lumbar motor neurons by thermally excited descending spinal tracts likely explains both hindlimb EMG and an enhanced MEP signal (seen before conduction block) respectively. A thermal mechanism may play a role in some unexplained MEP losses during intraoperative monitoring. EMG recordings might help to detect abnormal discharges and forewarn the monitorist during both mechanical and thermal injury to the spinal cord.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23179021     DOI: 10.1007/s10877-012-9417-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput        ISSN: 1387-1307            Impact factor:   2.502


  28 in total

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2.  Thermal injury kinetics in electrical trauma.

Authors:  B I Tropea; R C Lee
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3.  Electromyography detects mechanically-induced suprasegmental spinal motor tract injury: review of decompression at spinal cord level.

Authors:  Stanley A Skinner; Ensor E Transfeldt; Amir A Mehbod; John C Mullan; Joseph H Perra
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Authors:  J Donzelli; J P Leonetti; R D Wurster; J M Lee; M R Young
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5.  Electrical injury mechanisms: dynamics of the thermal response.

Authors:  R C Lee; M S Kolodney
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6.  The initial use of free-running electromyography to detect early motor tract injury during resection of intramedullary spinal cord lesions.

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8.  Role of cell membrane rupture in the pathogenesis of electrical trauma.

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9.  Loss of spinal cord monitoring signals in children during thoracic kyphosis correction with spinal osteotomy: why does it occur and what should you do?

Authors:  Gene Cheh; Lawrence G Lenke; Anne M Padberg; Yongjung J Kim; Michael D Daubs; Craig Kuhns; Georgia Stobbs; Marsha Hensley
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10.  Enhancement of the bulbocavernosus reflex during intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring through the use of double train stimulation: a pilot study.

Authors:  Stanley Skinner; Chala A Chiri; Jill Wroblewski; Ensor E Transfeldt
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2006-12-01       Impact factor: 1.977

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  2 in total

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2.  Porcine Model of Spinal Cord Injury: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Carly Weber-Levine; Andrew M Hersh; Kelly Jiang; Denis Routkevitch; Yohannes Tsehay; Alexander Perdomo-Pantoja; Brendan F Judy; Max Kerensky; Ann Liu; Melanie Adams; Jessica Izzi; Joshua C Doloff; Amir Manbachi; Nicholas Theodore
Journal:  Neurotrauma Rep       Date:  2022-09-01
  2 in total

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