Sloan T B
Department of Anesthesia, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 78284-7838, USA.
J Clin Neurophysiol. 1998 May;15(3):217-26. doi: 10.1097/00004691-199805000-00005.
With the increased use of intraoperative monitoring of the central nervous system (CNS) has come a need for better understanding of the effects of anesthetic agents on intraoperative recordings. The commonly used anesthetic agents and their effects on intraoperative electroencephalography (EEG) and evoked potentials (EP) are discussed. Halogenated inhalational anesthetics produce dose-related reduction in EEG amplitude and frequency after an initial activation. They also produce dose-related decreases in amplitude and increases in latency of sensory evoked potentials (SEP) that are most marked in cortically generated components. Subcortical, spinal, and peripheral evoked responses are less affected. Responses in the motor pathways are recordable in the epidural space; however, the relative contributions of sensory and motor tracts may be changed when both are present. Muscle responses are easily suppressed after spinal and motor cortex stimulation, probably by anesthetic effect at the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord. Intravenous analgesic agents (opioids, ketamine) are associated with less marked changes in EEG and evoked responses, with some increases in amplitude of cortically generated SEP caused by ketamine. Intravenous sedative-hypnotic drugs (droperidol, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, etomidate, propofol) produce dose-related depression of the EEG after initial activation and dose-related depression of evoked responses to a lesser extent than do the inhalation agents. Etomidate is associated with amplitude enhancement of EEG and cortically generated SEP. Muscle relaxants have minimal effect on the EEG and SEP. Their use, however, may alter muscle recordings from motor tract stimulation. These effects and their relevance to the choice of agents for specific monitoring techniques are discussed.
随着术中对中枢神经系统(CNS)监测的使用增加,人们需要更好地了解麻醉药物对术中记录的影响。本文讨论了常用麻醉药物及其对术中脑电图(EEG)和诱发电位(EP)的影响。卤化吸入麻醉药在初始激活后会导致EEG振幅和频率呈剂量依赖性降低。它们还会使感觉诱发电位(SEP)的振幅呈剂量依赖性降低,潜伏期延长,这在皮质产生的成分中最为明显。皮质下、脊髓和外周诱发反应受影响较小。运动通路的反应可在硬膜外间隙记录;然而,当感觉和运动束同时存在时,它们的相对贡献可能会发生变化。脊髓和运动皮层刺激后,肌肉反应很容易被抑制,这可能是由于脊髓前角细胞的麻醉作用。静脉镇痛药物(阿片类药物、氯胺酮)与EEG和诱发反应的变化不太明显有关,氯胺酮会使皮质产生的SEP振幅有所增加。静脉镇静催眠药物(氟哌利多、巴比妥类药物、苯二氮䓬类药物、依托咪酯、丙泊酚)在初始激活后会导致EEG呈剂量依赖性抑制,诱发反应的剂量依赖性抑制程度小于吸入麻醉药。依托咪酯与EEG和皮质产生的SEP振幅增强有关。肌肉松弛剂对EEG和SEP的影响最小。然而,它们的使用可能会改变运动束刺激产生的肌肉记录。本文讨论了这些影响及其与特定监测技术药物选择的相关性。