Lyon Russ, Feiner John, Lieberman Jeremy A
Department of Neurosurgery, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
J Neurosurg Anesthesiol. 2005 Jan;17(1):13-9.
Transcranial motor evoked potentials (MEPs) are useful for assessing the integrity of spinal cord motor tracts during major spine surgery. Anesthetic agents depress the amplitude of MEPs in a dose-dependent fashion. Anecdotal reports suggest that MEP responses degrade or "fade" over the duration of a surgery, despite unchanged anesthetic levels or other physiologic variables. This phenomenon has not been systematically analyzed. We performed a retrospective study of 418 patients who underwent spine surgery at UCSF using intraoperative MEP monitoring. We excluded patients who experienced variations in physiologic parameters that might affect MEP signals and those who developed new neurologic deficits. We identified 46 neurologically intact patients and 16 myelopathic patients who had surgery performed using a constant desflurane/N2O/narcotic or desflurane/propofol/narcotic anesthetic regimen. The minimum voltage threshold needed to produce an MEP response of at least 50 microV in amplitude was recorded at the beginning ("baseline") and end of surgery. The voltage threshold was higher at the end of the case than at baseline for each patient, regardless of anesthetic regimen. In normal patients, the rate of rise of the threshold was similar for those receiving propofol (11.4 +/- 6.9 V/hr) or N2O (9.7 +/- 5.9 V/hr) (P = not significant). Myelopathic patients demonstrated a larger rate of rise in voltage threshold, 23.4 +/- 12.2 V/hr, versus normal subjects (P < 0.01). The rate of rise of voltage threshold is inversely proportional to anesthetic duration. Prolonged exposure to anesthetic agents necessitates higher stimulating thresholds to elicit MEP responses, separate from the dose-dependent depressant effect. This retrospective study is limited and cannot explain the mechanism for this observed fade in signals. Recognition of anesthetic fade is essential when interpreting changes to the MEP response to avoid false-positive findings.
经颅运动诱发电位(MEPs)有助于在脊柱大手术期间评估脊髓运动束的完整性。麻醉剂会以剂量依赖的方式降低MEPs的波幅。有轶事报道称,尽管麻醉水平或其他生理变量未变,但在手术过程中MEP反应会逐渐减弱或“消失”。这一现象尚未得到系统分析。我们对418例在加州大学旧金山分校接受脊柱手术并术中进行MEP监测的患者进行了一项回顾性研究。我们排除了生理参数发生变化可能影响MEP信号的患者以及出现新的神经功能缺损的患者。我们确定了46例神经功能正常的患者和16例脊髓病变患者,他们接受了使用恒定地氟醚/N₂O/麻醉性镇痛药或地氟醚/丙泊酚/麻醉性镇痛药麻醉方案的手术。记录在手术开始时(“基线”)和结束时产生至少50微伏波幅的MEP反应所需的最小电压阈值。无论采用何种麻醉方案,每位患者在手术结束时的电压阈值均高于基线时。在正常患者中,接受丙泊酚(11.4±6.9伏/小时)或N₂O(9.7±5.9伏/小时)的患者阈值上升速率相似(P无显著性差异)。脊髓病变患者的电压阈值上升速率更大,为23.4±12.2伏/小时,与正常受试者相比(P<0.01)。电压阈值的上升速率与麻醉持续时间成反比。长时间暴露于麻醉剂需要更高的刺激阈值才能引发MEP反应,这与剂量依赖性抑制作用无关。这项回顾性研究存在局限性,无法解释观察到的信号消失的机制。在解释MEP反应变化时,认识到麻醉消退对于避免假阳性结果至关重要。