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脊柱侧弯手术中即将发生脊髓损伤的神经生理学检测

Neurophysiological detection of impending spinal cord injury during scoliosis surgery.

作者信息

Schwartz Daniel M, Auerbach Joshua D, Dormans John P, Flynn John, Drummond Denis S, Bowe J Andrew, Laufer Samuel, Shah Suken A, Bowen J Richard, Pizzutillo Peter D, Jones Kristofer J, Drummond Denis S

机构信息

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

出版信息

J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007 Nov;89(11):2440-9. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.F.01476.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Despite the many reports attesting to the efficacy of intraoperative somatosensory evoked potential monitoring in reducing the prevalence of iatrogenic spinal cord injury during corrective scoliosis surgery, these afferent neurophysiological signals can provide only indirect evidence of injury to the motor tracts since they monitor posterior column function. Early reports on the use of transcranial electric motor evoked potentials to monitor the corticospinal motor tracts directly suggested that the method holds great promise for improving detection of emerging spinal cord injury. We sought to compare the efficacy of these two methods of monitoring to detect impending iatrogenic neural injury during scoliosis surgery.

METHODS

We reviewed the intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring records of 1121 consecutive patients (834 female and 287 male) with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (mean age, 13.9 years) treated between 2000 and 2004 at four pediatric spine centers. The same group of experienced surgical neurophysiologists monitored spinal cord function in all patients with use of a standardized multimodality technique with the patient under total intravenous anesthesia. A relevant neurophysiological change (an alert) was defined as a reduction in amplitude (unilateral or bilateral) of at least 50% for somatosensory evoked potentials and at least 65% for transcranial electric motor evoked potentials compared with baseline.

RESULTS

Thirty-eight (3.4%) of the 1121 patients had recordings that met the criteria for a relevant signal change (i.e., an alert). Of those thirty-eight patients, seventeen showed suppression of the amplitude of transcranial electric motor evoked potentials in excess of 65% without any evidence of changes in somatosensory evoked potentials. In nine of the thirty-eight patients, the signal change was related to hypotension and was corrected with augmentation of the blood pressure. The remaining twenty-nine patients had an alert that was related directly to a surgical maneuver. Three alerts occurred following segmental vessel clamping, and the remaining twenty-six were related to posterior instrumentation and correction. Nine (35%) of these twenty-six patients with an instrumentation-related alert, or 0.8% of the cohort, awoke with a transient motor and/or sensory deficit. Seven of these nine patients presented solely with a motor deficit, which was detected by intraoperative monitoring of transcranial electric motor evoked potentials in all cases, and two patients had only sensory symptoms. Somatosensory evoked potential monitoring failed to identify a motor deficit in four of the seven patients with a confirmed motor deficit. Furthermore, when changes in somatosensory evoked potentials occurred, they lagged behind the changes in transcranial electric motor evoked potentials by an average of approximately five minutes. With an appropriate response to the alert, the motor or sensory deficit resolved in all nine patients within one to ninety days.

CONCLUSIONS

This study underscores the advantage of monitoring the spinal cord motor tracts directly by recording transcranial electric motor evoked potentials in addition to somatosensory evoked potentials. Transcranial electric motor evoked potentials are exquisitely sensitive to altered spinal cord blood flow due to either hypotension or a vascular insult. Moreover, changes in transcranial electric motor evoked potentials are detected earlier than are changes in somatosensory evoked potentials, thereby facilitating more rapid identification of impending spinal cord injury.

摘要

背景

尽管有许多报告证明术中体感诱发电位监测在降低矫正性脊柱侧弯手术中医源性脊髓损伤发生率方面的有效性,但由于这些传入神经生理信号监测的是后柱功能,所以只能提供运动束损伤的间接证据。早期关于使用经颅电运动诱发电位直接监测皮质脊髓运动束的报告表明,该方法在改善对新发脊髓损伤的检测方面具有很大潜力。我们试图比较这两种监测方法在检测脊柱侧弯手术中即将发生的医源性神经损伤方面的有效性。

方法

我们回顾了2000年至2004年期间在四个儿科脊柱中心接受治疗的1121例连续青少年特发性脊柱侧弯患者(834例女性和287例男性,平均年龄13.9岁)的术中神经生理监测记录。同一组经验丰富的外科神经生理学家在所有患者全身静脉麻醉下使用标准化多模态技术监测脊髓功能。相关神经生理变化(警报)定义为与基线相比,体感诱发电位幅度(单侧或双侧)至少降低50%,经颅电运动诱发电位幅度至少降低65%。

结果

1121例患者中有38例(3.4%)的记录符合相关信号变化(即警报)标准。在这38例患者中,17例显示经颅电运动诱发电位幅度抑制超过65%,而体感诱发电位无任何变化迹象。在38例患者中的9例中,信号变化与低血压有关,通过提高血压得以纠正。其余29例患者的警报与手术操作直接相关。3例警报发生在节段性血管夹闭后,其余26例与后路器械植入和矫正有关。这26例与器械相关警报的患者中有9例(35%),即队列中的0.8%,术后出现短暂运动和/或感觉功能缺损。这9例患者中有7例仅表现为运动功能缺损,所有病例术中经颅电运动诱发电位监测均检测到,2例患者仅有感觉症状。在7例确诊为运动功能缺损的患者中,体感诱发电位监测未能识别出其中4例的运动功能缺损。此外,当体感诱发电位发生变化时,它们比经颅电运动诱发电位的变化平均滞后约五分钟。通过对警报做出适当反应,所有9例患者中的运动或感觉功能缺损在1至90天内得到缓解。

结论

本研究强调了除体感诱发电位外,通过记录经颅电运动诱发电位直接监测脊髓运动束的优势。经颅电运动诱发电位对因低血压或血管损伤导致的脊髓血流改变极为敏感。此外,经颅电运动诱发电位的变化比体感诱发电位的变化更早被检测到,从而有助于更快速地识别即将发生的脊髓损伤。

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