• Neurosurgery · May 2012

    Impact of changes in intraoperative somatosensory evoked potentials on stroke rates after clipping of intracranial aneurysms.

    • Robert T Wicks, Gustavo Pradilla, Shaan M Raza, Uri Hadelsberg, Alexander L Coon, Judy Huang, and Rafael J Tamargo.
    • The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Department of Neurosurgery, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
    • Neurosurgery. 2012 May 1;70(5):1114-24; discussion 1124.

    BackgroundSomatosensory evoked potential (SSEP) monitoring is used during intracranial aneurysm surgery to track the effects of anesthesia, surgical manipulation, and temporary clipping.ObjectiveTo present the outcomes of 663 consecutive patients (691 cases) treated surgically for intracranial aneurysms who underwent intraoperative SSEP monitoring and to analyze the sensitivity and specificity of significant SSEP changes in predicting postoperative stroke.MethodsOf 691 surgeries analyzed, 403 (391 anterior circulation, 12 posterior circulation) were unruptured aneurysms and 288 (277 anterior, 11 posterior) were ruptured. Postoperatively, symptomatic patients underwent computed tomography imaging. Positive predictive value, negative predictive value, sensitivity, and specificity were calculated with a Fisher exact test (2-tailed P value).ResultsChanges in SSEP occurred in 45 of 691 cases (6.5%): 16 of 403 (4.0%) in unruptured aneurysms and 29 of 288 (10%) in ruptured aneurysms. In unruptured aneurysms, reversible SSEP changes were associated with a 20% stroke rate, but irreversible changes were associated with an 80% stroke rate. In ruptured aneurysms, however, reversible changes were associated with a 12% stroke rate, and irreversible changes were associated with a 42% stroke rate. The overall accuracy of SSEP changes in predicting postoperative stroke was as follows: positive predictive value, 30%; negative predictive value, 94%; sensitivity, 25%; and specificity, 95%.ConclusionIntraoperative SSEP changes are more reliable in unruptured aneurysm cases than in ruptured cases. Whereas irreversible changes in unruptured cases were associated with an 80% stroke rate, such changes in ruptured cases did not have any adverse ischemic sequelae in 58% of patients. This information is helpful during the intraoperative assessment of reported SSEP changes.

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