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Journal ArticleDOI

Noninvasive Motor Evoked Potential Monitoring During Neurosurgical Operations on the Spinal Cord

Josef Zentner
- 01 May 1989 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 5, pp 709-712
TLDR
MEP monitoring during neurosurgical operations on the spinal cord is a sensitive method for early detection of impending neurological complications and the influence of anesthesia and the definition of acceptable limits for changes in amplitudes are presented.
Abstract
We present the results of monitoring descending pathways with motor evoked potentials (MEP) in 50 patients during neurosurgical operations on the spinal cord. The electromyographic responses of the anterior tibial muscles were recorded. In addition, in 24 patients responses of the thenar muscles after transcranial electrical stimulation of the motor cortex were recorded. Usually, the averages of 5 to 15 signals were evaluated. Although potentials were obtained preoperatively in all 50 patients, during neuroleptanesthesia intraoperative recording from the anterior tibial muscles was possible in 43 patients (86%) and from the thenar muscles in 21 patients (87.5%). Amplitudes were superior to latencies as evaluation criteria for intraoperative changes in potentials. On the basis of acceptable changes in amplitudes of up to 50% at the end of the operation, 16 recordings from the thenar muscles (76.2%) and 35 from the anterior tibial muscles (81.4%) correlated correctly with the postoperative neurological status; there were false positive results in 5 (23.8%) and 8 (18.6%) patients, respectively. We did not observe false negative findings. Postoperative neurological complications coincided in every case with permanent reduction in amplitudes of more than 50% of the base lines or with intraoperative loss of potentials as observed in 3 and 1 patient, respectively. MEP monitoring during neurosurgical operations on the spinal cord is a sensitive method for early detection of impending neurological complications. Major problems are the influence of anesthesia and the definition of acceptable limits for changes in amplitudes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring of the spinal cord during spinal cord and spine surgery: a review focus on the corticospinal tracts.

TL;DR: While MEPs are now considered the gold standard for monitoring the motor pathways, SEPs continue to retain value as they provide specificity for assessing the integrity of the dorsal column, but it is believed SEPs should not be used exclusively--or as an alternative to motor evoked potentials--during spine surgery, but rather as a complementary method in combination with MEPs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transcranial current stimulation focality using disc and ring electrode configurations: FEM analysis.

TL;DR: The concentric-ring design may provide an optimized configuration for targeted modulation of superficial cortical neuron soma hyper/depolarizing, at the expense of increased total surface current.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motor-evoked potential monitoring for intramedullary spinal cord tumor surgery: correlation of clinical and neurophysiological data in a series of 100 consecutive procedures.

TL;DR: Intraoperative MEPs adequately represented the motor status of patients undergoing surgery for intramedullary tumors, and impairment of the functional integrity of the motor pathways was detected before permanent deficits occurred.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of motor evoked potentials during surgery for intramedullary spinal cord tumors.

TL;DR: MEP monitorability was a better predictor of functional outcome than the patient's preoperative motor status for the adult group and not for pediatric patients, and should serve as a serious warning sign to the surgeon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Safety of intraoperative transcranial electrical stimulation motor evoked potential monitoring.

TL;DR: The well-established benefits of TES MEP monitoring decidedly outweigh the associated risks, and otherwise unexplained intraoperative seizures and possibly arrhythmias are indications to abort TES.
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