• J Clin Neurophysiol · Jan 1996

    Case Reports

    Monitoring of median nerve somatosensory evoked potentials during cervical spinal cord decompression.

    • G C Dennis, O Dehkordi, R M Millis, A N Cole, D S Brown, and O A Paul.
    • Department of Surgery, Howard University Hospital, Washington D.C. 20060, USA.
    • J Clin Neurophysiol. 1996 Jan 1;13(1):51-9.

    AbstractWe evaluated the intraoperative utility of monitoring median nerve somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) in 31 consecutively hospitalized neurosurgical patients (mean age 55.3 +/- 2.1 years) who underwent spinal cord decompression for cervical herniated disc, spondylosis, or tumor. Pre- and postoperative standard neurological examinations included evaluation of motor function, sensory responses, gait, tone, and reflexes. Evoked potentials were recorded from clavicular Erb's (N9) and contralateral cortical (N20) points. Intraoperatively, SEP measurements were obtained after the onset of anesthesia (baseline control) and were repeated throughout the operative procedures. N20 and N9-N20 conduction latencies were measured for each SEP recording; disappearance of the SEP waveform was interpreted as a nonquantifiable increase in latency. Follow-up neurological examinations were made immediately after and up to 6 months following surgery. Postoperatively, the 31 study subjects were assigned to one of two groups based on neurological evaluation: 27 group I subjects had either no change or improvement (good outcome) whereas four group II subjects had postoperative neurological deterioration (poor outcome). Intraoperative N9-N20 interpeak latency was found to increase during cervical decompression in six of 27 group I and in two of four group II subjects. Only two of the Group I subjects exhibited increases > 10% (14 and 19%, respectively). Intraoperative communication to the surgeon of a marked increase of N9-N20 latency during positioning for cervical traction clearly obviated a poor outcome in one group I subject; Upon removal of traction, latency decreased and significant changes in neurological function were not detected postoperatively. The SEP waveform disappeared in two of the group II and in none of the group I subjects. In the two group II subjects exhibiting increases of N9-N20 latencies, increments were > 20%. These findings indicate that in patients undergoing cervical spinal cord decompression, disappearance of SEPs or increases > 20% in the N9-N20 interpeak latency are suggestive of operative conditions that place patients at risk for poor neurological outcome.

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