Carlson G D, Warden K E, Barbeau J M, Bahniuk E, Kutina-Nelson K L, Biro C L, Bohlman H H, LaManna J C
University Hospitals Spine Institute, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1997 Jun 15;22(12):1285-91. doi: 10.1097/00007632-199706150-00002.
To better understand the relationships between primary mechanical factors of spinal cord trauma and secondary mechanisms of injury, this study evaluated regional blood flow and somatosensory evoked potential function in an in vivo canine model with controlled velocity spinal cord displacement and real-time piston-spinal cord interface pressure feedback.
To determine the effect of regional spinal cord blood flow and viscoelastic cord relaxation on recovery of neural conduction, with and without spinal cord decompression.
The relative contribution of mechanical and vascular factors on spinal cord injury remains undefined.
Twelve beagles were anesthetized and underwent T13 laminectomy. A constant velocity spinal cord compression was applied using a hydraulic loading piston with a subminiature pressure transducer rigidly attached to the spinal column. Spinal cord displacement was stopped when somatosensory evoked potential amplitudes decreased by 50% (maximum compression). Six animals were decompressed 5 minutes after maximum compression and were compared with six animals who had spinal cord displacement maintained for 3 hours and were not decompressed. Regional spinal cord blood flow was measured with a fluorescent microsphere technique.
At maximum compression, regional spinal cord blood flow at the injury site fell from 19.0 +/- 1.3 mL/100 g/min to 12.6 +/- 1.0 mL/100 g/min, whereas piston-spinal cord interface pressure was 30.5 +/- 1.8 kPa, and cord displacement measured 2.1 +/- 0.1 mm (mean +/- SE). Five minutes after the piston translation was stopped, the spinal cord interface pressure had dissipated 51%, whereas the somatosensory evoked potential amplitudes continued to decrease to 16% of baseline. In the sustained compression group, cord interface pressure relaxed to 13% of maximum within 90 minutes; however, no recovery of somatosensory evoked potential function occurred, and regional spinal cord blood flow remained significantly lower than baseline at 30 and 180 minutes after maximum compression. In the six animals that underwent spinal cord decompression, somatosensory evoked potential function and regional spinal cord blood flow recovered to baseline 30 minutes after maximum compression.
Despite rapid cord relaxation of more than 50% within 5 minutes after maximum compression, somatosensory evoked potential conduction recovered only with early decompression. Spinal cord decompression was associated with an early recovery of regional spinal cord blood flow and somatosensory evoked potential recovery. By 3 hours, spinal cord blood flow was similar in both the compressed and decompressed groups, despite that somatosensory evoked potential recovery occurred only in the decompressed group.
为了更好地理解脊髓损伤的主要机械因素与继发性损伤机制之间的关系,本研究在一个活体犬模型中评估了局部血流和体感诱发电位功能,该模型具有可控速度的脊髓移位以及实时活塞 - 脊髓界面压力反馈。
确定在有或没有脊髓减压的情况下,局部脊髓血流和粘弹性脊髓松弛对神经传导恢复的影响。
机械因素和血管因素对脊髓损伤的相对贡献仍不明确。
12只比格犬麻醉后行T13椎板切除术。使用液压加载活塞施加恒定速度的脊髓压迫,活塞上刚性连接一个超小型压力传感器并固定于脊柱。当体感诱发电位幅度下降50%(最大压迫)时停止脊髓移位。6只动物在最大压迫后5分钟进行减压,并与6只脊髓移位维持3小时且未减压的动物进行比较。用荧光微球技术测量局部脊髓血流。
在最大压迫时,损伤部位的局部脊髓血流从19.0±1.3 mL/100 g/min降至12.6±1.0 mL/100 g/min,而活塞 - 脊髓界面压力为30.5±1.8 kPa,脊髓移位量为2.1±0.1 mm(均值±标准误)。活塞平移停止5分钟后,脊髓界面压力消散了51%,而体感诱发电位幅度继续下降至基线的16%。在持续压迫组中,脊髓界面压力在90分钟内松弛至最大值的13%;然而,体感诱发电位功能未恢复,且在最大压迫后30分钟和180分钟时局部脊髓血流仍显著低于基线。在6只接受脊髓减压的动物中,体感诱发电位功能和局部脊髓血流在最大压迫后30分钟恢复至基线。
尽管在最大压迫后5分钟内脊髓迅速松弛超过50%,但体感诱发电位传导仅在早期减压时恢复。脊髓减压与局部脊髓血流的早期恢复以及体感诱发电位恢复相关。到3小时时,尽管体感诱发电位恢复仅发生在减压组,但受压组和减压组的脊髓血流相似。