| Literature DB >> 30185199 |
Ryo Ugawa1, Tomoyuki Takigawa2, Hiroko Shimomiya3, Takuma Ohnishi3, Yuri Kurokawa3, Yoshiaki Oda1, Yasuyuki Shiozaki1, Haruo Misawa1, Masato Tanaka4, Toshifumi Ozaki1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intraoperative neuromonitoring using motor evoked potentials (MEP) satisfactorily detects motor tract integrity changes during spinal surgery. However, monitoring is affected by "anesthetic fade," in which the stimulation threshold increases because the waveform amplitude decreases with the accumulation of propofol. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to clarify the effect of anesthetic fade on transcranial MEPs by investigating the time-dependent changes of amplitude during spinal deformity surgeries.Entities:
Keywords: Abductor digiti minimi; Abductor hallucis; Alarm point; Amplitude; Anesthetic fade; False positive; Intraoperative neuromonitoring; Motor evoked potential; Propofol; Spinal deformity surgery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30185199 PMCID: PMC6126029 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-018-0934-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | |
| Patients who underwent surgical correction for spinal deformities with transcranial MEP monitoring | |
| Exclusion criteria | |
| Patients in which an adequate waveform could not be obtained during the surgery | |
| Patients in which new neurologic deficits were found after the surgery (i.e., true positive cases) |
Types of spinal deformity
| Spinal deformity (142 patients) | |
|---|---|
| Idiopathic scoliosis | 66 |
| Adult deformity | 28 |
| Neuromuscular scoliosis | 19 |
| Syndromic scoliosis | 17 |
| Congenital scoliosis | 12 |
Modalities and standardized institutional settings for the assessment of MEP
| MEP stimulation | MEP recording | |
|---|---|---|
| Monitoring system | Neuromaster MEE-1216 (Nihon Kohden, Japan) | |
| Electrodes | Corkscrew electrodes (UNIQUE MEDICAL, Japan) | Surface-patch electrodes (Nihon Kohden, Japan) |
| Montage of electrodes | C3-C4 (according to the international 10/20 system) | Bilateral abductor digiti minimi muscles |
| Bilateral abductor hallucis muscles | ||
| Specifications | Stimulus (anode), repeated train of 5–7 stimuli | Filters, 0.05–1.5 kHz |
| Interstimulus interval, 2 ms | Average, 5 | |
| Intensity, 150–200 mA | ||
| Duration, 0.5 ms, biphasic |
MEP motor evoked potential
Fig. 1Schema of the time course. Time 0 was defined as when the infusion of propofol started. Muscle relaxant was administered only upon propofol induction. A small amount of inhalation anesthetic (sevoflurane, 0.8 to 8.0%) was used for anesthetic induction in 44 pediatric cases. Anesthesia was maintained with continuous infusion of propofol and remifentanil. Star marker, start of surgery; MEP, motor evoked potential; TCI, target-controlled infusion (a device to deliver the drug to achieve specific predicted target drug concentrations in the blood); BIS, bispectral index (a device to assess the depth of anesthesia)
Fig. 2Amplitude changes of the abductor digiti minimi (ADM) and abductor hallucis (AH) muscles post-propofol infusion. a In the ADM, the amplitude at 5 and 6 h was significantly lower than that at 2 h. Amplitudes were obtained from 120 cases at 1 h, 127 cases at 2 h, 127 cases at 3 h, 111 cases at 4 h, 75 cases at 5 h, and 18 cases at 6 h. b In the AH, the amplitude at 4, 5, and 6 h was significantly lower than at 2 h. Amplitudes were obtained from 129 cases at 1 h, 139 cases at 2 h, 139 cases at 3 h, 122 cases at 4 h, 86 cases at 5 h, and 21 cases at 6 h. (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.005, †P < 0.0005, ‡P < 0.0000005). Values are expressed as means, and bars represent standard deviations