| Literature DB >> 33507473 |
Sebastiaan E Dulfer1, M M Sahinovic2, F Lange3, F H Wapstra4, D Postmus5, A R E Potgieser6, C Faber4, R J M Groen6, A R Absalom2, G Drost6,3.
Abstract
For high-risk spinal surgeries, intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM) is used to detect and prevent intraoperative neurological injury. The motor tracts are monitored by recording and analyzing muscle transcranial electrical stimulation motor evoked potentials (mTc-MEPs). A mTc-MEP amplitude decrease of 50-80% is the most common warning criterion for possible neurological injury. However, these warning criteria often result in false positive warnings. False positives may be caused by inadequate depth of anesthesia and blood pressure on mTc-MEP amplitudes. The aim of this paper is to validate the study protocol in which the goal is to investigate the effects of depth of anesthesia (part 1) and blood pressure (part 2) on mTc-MEPs. Per part, 25 patients will be included. In order to investigate the effects of depth of anesthesia, a processed electroencephalogram (pEEG) monitor will be used. At pEEG values of 30, 40 and 50, mTc-MEP measurements will be performed. To examine the effect of blood pressure on mTc-MEPs the mean arterial pressure will be elevated from 60 to 100 mmHg during which mTc-MEP measurements will be performed. We hypothesize that by understanding the effects of depth of anesthesia and blood pressure on mTc-MEPs, the mTc-MEP monitoring can be interpreted more reliably. This may contribute to fewer false positive warnings. By performing this study after induction and prior to incision, this protocol provides a unique opportunity to study the effects of depths of anesthesia and blood pressure on mTc-MEPs alone with as little confounders as possible. Trial registration number NL7772.Entities:
Keywords: Blood pressure; Depth of anesthesia; Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring; Motor evoked potentials
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33507473 PMCID: PMC8497310 DOI: 10.1007/s10877-020-00645-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Monit Comput ISSN: 1387-1307 Impact factor: 2.502
Fig. 1Schematic overview study design part 1: effects of depth of anesthesia on mTc-MEP characteristics in spinal surgery. pEEG processed electroencephalogram, Propofol Ce propofol effect site concentration, mTc-MEP muscle recorded transcranial electrical stimulation motor evoked potential
Participant timeline
| Before hospital admission | Day 1 of hospital admission | Day 2: procedure | Day 2: procedure | Day 4/7 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Approach, information provision | X | ||||
| 2 | Informed consent | X | X | |||
| 3 | Inclusion in part 1 or 2 | X | X | |||
| 4 | Pre-operative neurological examination | X | ||||
| 5 | mTc-MEP measurements at different pEEG and MAP values | X | ||||
| 6 | Taking blood samples for propofol blood concentrations | X | ||||
| 7 | Collecting propofol Ce, MAP/pEEG values immediately after mTc-MEP measurements | X | ||||
| 8 | Post-operative neurological examination | X |
mTc-MEP muscle recorded transcranial electrical stimulation motor evoked potential, pEEG processed electroencephalogram, MAP mean arterial pressure
Fig. 2Schematic overview study design part 2: effects of blood pressure on mTc-MEP characteristics in spinal surgery. MAP mean arterial pressure, mTc-MEP muscle recorded transcranial electrical stimulation motor evoked potential