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Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Jan 1996
Traumatic cervical spinal cord injury: relation between somatosensory evoked potentials, neurological deficit, and hand function.
- A Curt and V Dietz.
- Swiss Paraplegic Centre, University Hospital Balgrist, Zurich, Switzerland.
- Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1996 Jan 1; 77 (1): 48-53.
ObjectiveMedian and ulnar somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) in the assessment of cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) in relation to the outcome of hand function.DesignCohort analytical study.SettingSpinal cord injury center, university hospital.PatientsConsecutively sampled, 23 acute and 46 chronic tetraplegics.Main Outcome Measures(1) Median and ulnar SEP recordings graded in 5 categories, from normal to absent; (2) clinical examination of algesia/aesthesia in dermatomes C5/6 and C8/Th1 graded in categories of normal, impaired, and loss of sensation; (3) clinical examination of hand function graded in 4 categories, from active to inactive hand function.ResultsPathological median and ulnar SEP were found in 46% and 76% of patients, respectively. A differentiation between upper (C3-C6) and lower (C6/C7-Th1) cervical SCI was possible by comparing the SEP N20 latencies (but not amplitudes) of both nerves (Mann-Whitney U test, p < .01). In follow-up examinations over 6 months the N20 amplitude increased significantly (ANCOVA, p < .001), while the N20 latency did not change. By both ulnar SEP recordings and assessment of the sensory deficit in dermatome C8/Th1 the outcome of hand function, i.e., the development of active or inactive hand function, could be predicted (Mann-Whitney U test, p < .01).ConclusionMedian and ulnar SEP are valuable to indicate the level of injury, the degree of sensory impairment and to predict the outcome of hand function even in unconscious patients. They can improve the diagnostic assessment of cervical SCI.
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