| Literature DB >> 32473653 |
Shujie Wang1, Zhifu Ren2, Jia Liu3, Jianguo Zhang1, Ye Tian4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgery is usually the treatment of choice for patients with cervical compressive myelopathy (CCM). Motor evoked potential (MEP) has proved to be helpful tool in evaluating intraoperative cervical spinal cord function change of those patients. This study aims to describe and evaluate different MEP baseline phenotypes for predicting MEP changes during CCM surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical compressive myelopathy (CCM); Intraoperative cervical cord function changes; Intraoperative neuromonitoring; MEP baselines phenotypes; Motor evoked potential (MEP)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32473653 PMCID: PMC7261380 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-020-01799-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
The general data and the clinical diagnoses of all patients
| General data and diagnosis | Mean ± SD (Range)/N (%) |
|---|---|
| Age | 58.2 ± 11.1 (26–75 y) |
| Male/Female | 71/34 |
| Height | 168.9 ± 8.4 (140–180 cm) |
| Weight | 71.4 ± 14.1 (42–98 kg) |
| BMI | 24.9 ± 4.1 (15–34) |
| Operation time | 164.8 ± 39.3 (110–300 min) |
| Bleeding volume | 232.2 ± 179.5 (150–900 ml) |
| Cervical spondylotic myelopathy | 63 (60.0%) |
| OPLL | 13 (12.4%) |
| Cervical disk herniation | 6 (5.7%) |
| Congenital anomaly of cervical spine | 4 (3.8%) |
| Atlantoaxial subluxation | 12 (11.4%) |
| Others | 7 (6.7%) |
| ACDF | 19 (18.1%) |
| PCDF | 78 (74.3%) |
| Laminectomy | 8 (7.6%) |
OPLL Ossification of posterior longitudinal ligament, ACDF Anterior cervical decompression and fusion, PCDF Posterior cervical decompression and fusion
Fig. 1Patients’ duration of symptoms and preop mJOA scores associated with MEP classification
The detail of different MEP baseline phenotypes
| Types | Amplitude (μV) | Latency (ms) | Stability |
|---|---|---|---|
| > 300 | < 50 | Excellent | |
| > 300 | > 50 | Good | |
| 100–300 | < 50 | ||
| 100–300 | > 50 | Moderate | |
| 20–100 | – | Poor | |
| 0–20 | – | Indeterminate/High Risk |
The MEP types in this study aimed at unilateral baseline
Fig. 2a The representative MEP waveform and parameters among the 5 baseline types. Type II has two subtypes. b The preoperative T2-weighted sagittal magnetic resonance image (MRI) from the patients with different MEP baseline types (Types I, II, III, IV and V)
Fig. 3The TOF were monitored when recording MEP baseline
Fig. 4Absolute value distribution of intraoperative MEP change rate with different baseline phenotypes
The summary of monitoring changes and new neurologic deficit for each MEP baseline type from 105 CCM patients
| Type I | Type II | Type III | Type IV | Type V | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 7 | |
| 0 | 1 | 5 | 6 | 6 | |
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 4 | |
| 31 (29.5%) | 21 (20.0%) | 14 (13.3%) | 24 (22.9%) | 15 (14.3%) |
Results of stepwise multivariate regression analysis
| MEP warning | ||
|---|---|---|
| Model: (R2=0.301, | ||
| β-coefficient | ||
| 0.205 | 0.0081 | |
| 0.018 | 0.0358 | |
| 0.189 | 0.0095 | |
| 0.268 | 0.0026 | |
Note: All independent variables were entered into the regression. Values denoted are β-coefficient values (95% confidence intervals)
mJOA Japanese Orthopedic Association, MEP Motor-Evoked Potentials, SC Spinal Cord