| Literature DB >> 30198227 |
Jay L Shils1, Jeffrey E Arle2,3.
Abstract
Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is a common therapeutic technique for treating medically refractory neuropathic back and other limb pain syndromes. SCS has historically been performed using a sedative anesthetic technique where the patient is awakened at various times during a surgical procedure to evaluate the location of the stimulator lead. This technique has potential complications, and thus other methods that allow the use of a general anesthetic have been developed. There are two primary methods for placing leads under general anesthesia, based on 1) compound muscle action potentials and 2) collisions between somatosensory evoked potentials. Both techniques are discussed, and the literature on SCS lead placement under general anesthesia using intraoperative neurophysiological mapping is comprehensively reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Collision; EMG; Neurophysiology; Spinal cord stimulation; Standard somatosensory evoked potential
Year: 2018 PMID: 30198227 PMCID: PMC6172495 DOI: 10.3988/jcn.2018.14.4.444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Neurol ISSN: 1738-6586 Impact factor: 3.077
Fig. 1Graphical representation of the activated pathway during the antidromic CMAP technique. The SCS lead stimulates the dorsal column at an intensity that is high enough to activate sufficient large Ia fibers to antidromically excite the alpha motor neurons and generate a CMAP in the muscle. It should be noted that stimulation level is much lower during normal pain therapy, and so no motor activation occurs.8 CMAP: compound muscle action potential, SCS: spinal cord stimulation.
Fig. 2Three different waveforms, two of which are artifacts. The response in the red circle is an artifact from the stimulation device. The response in the green circle is from an EKG artifact. The responses in the yellow circle are compound muscle action potential generated by the antidromic activation of the alpha motor neuron pool for this muscle group.
Fig. 3Graphical representation of the stimulation paradigms used for different lead types. The first lead on the left shows the sequence used, with the leftmost electrode pair being the first tested and then sequentially going around the leads testing each electrode pair in a cranial-to-caudal/left-to-right order. A similar pattern is used for the other electrodes.
Studies that specifically involved the antidromic CMAP technique
| First author (Ref.) | Frequency (Hz) | Pulse width (ms) | Intensity range* | Intensity increments* | Contacts | Criteria | Anesthesia | Localization success rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shils JL | 60 | 210 | Min to Max stimulator output | 0.5 | Pairs with cranial anodes. If no activation, more anodes were added | Initial side activated and then relative to the other side based on intensity for laterality. See text and | TIVA, with propofol and fentanyl after intubation | 91.3 |
| Mammis A | 5–10 | 200–300 | Not specified | Not specified | Pairs of contacts on the most-lateral columns of a lead | Lead position was adjusted based on EMG symmetry (not defined) | General anesthesia | Not specified |
| Falowski SM | 3–5 | 100–600 | 0–12 mA | Not specified | Select pairs of electrodes (undefined) | Stimulus-evoked CMAP and fluoroscopy used to define the midline (undefined technique) | TIVA, with propofol, narcotics, and benzodiazepines | Not specified |
| Schoen N | 60–70 | Not specified | 200–400 mV | 50 mV | Not specified | Comparison of left and right stimulation | TIVA with propofol, or dexmedetomidine with a narcotic | Not specified |
| Tamkus AA | 60 | 210 | Min to Max stimulator output | 0.5 | Pairs with cranial anodes. If no activation, more anodes were added | See reference | TIVA | 93.5 |
| Roth SG | 60 | 300 | 0–10 units | 0.5 | Contact of interest based on the predicted sweet spot | Lateralization was determined on one side. Responses of pairs of contacts were at least twofold those of the corresponding contact pair | Not specified | 89.0 |
| Air EL | Initially >50, then >10 | 200–300 | 4–10 mA | Not specified | Right and left guarded cathode configuration. | Symmetry between right and left leads used to determine the midline | General anesthesia | 100 |
| Both lateral and midline columns were tested |
*Unspecified units for the device output, and could be either milliamps or volts.
CMAP: compound muscle action potential, Max: maximum, Min: minimum, TIVA: total intravenous anesthetic.
Fig. 4Complete activation of all muscles on the right side with no continuous response found on the left side.
Fig. 5Plot of the location of the spinal cord midline as determined by the technique for each electrode pair. See the text for a detailed description.
Fig. 6Graphical representation of the basis for the SSEP collision technique. On the left side, the SSEP passes through the sensory pathways uninhibited by any external SCS, thus producing a normal cortical SSEP response. On the right side, the SCS blocks the SSEP stimuli from reaching the cortex, resulting in no cortical SSEP response. See the text for more details. SCS: spinal cord stimulation, SSEP: standard somatosensory evoked potential.
Fig. 7A collision occurs when the SCS-generated antidromic AP and the SSEP-generated orthodromic AP meet at the same point while they are traveling in opposite directions. When this occurs no AP reaches the cortex to generate a response. In some very rare situations the stimuli may be sufficiently out of phase to allow an SSEP AP to pass undisturbed. However, the large difference between the SCS rate and the SSEP stimulation rate makes this condition highly unlikely. AP: action potentials, SCS: spinal cord stimulation, SSEP: standard somatosensory evoked potential.
Studies that specifically involved the SSEP collision technique
| First author (Ref.) | SSEP frequency (Hz) | SSEP pulse width (ms) | SCS frequency (Hz) | SCS intensity range (voltage/current) | Contacts | Criteria | Anesthesia | Localization success rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balzer JR | 2.45 | 200 | 40–60 | 1–6 V | Single column lead | >75% reduction of cortical SSEP intensity on contralateral side | General | 100 |
| Muncie JL | Not specified | Not specified | 60 | 0.5–5 mA | Multiple pairs of contacts | Nonspecific, just looking for intensity reduction in contralateral cortex | < 1.0 mac inhalational with narcotics and no N2O and TOF=0–2/4 | 100 |
| Roth SG | Not specified | Not specified | 60 | Incremented in steps of 0.5 V or 0.5 mA up to 10.0 V or 10.0 mA | Selected based on the predicted sweet spot | >40% reduction in contralateral cortical SSEP | Not specified | 69 |
| Tamkus AA | 0.5–5 | 200–300 | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | >50% reduction in contralateral cortical SSEP intensity | TIVA | 64.3 |
| Uraski | Not specified | Not specified | Variable | Increased until the patient felt parasthesias | >40% reduction in contralateral cortical SSEP intensity | Not specified | 83.3 |
Intensity.
SCS: spinal cord stimulation, SSEP: standard somatosensory evoked potential, TIVA: total intravenous anesthetic, TOF: train-of-four.