Neurophysiologie clinique = Clinical neurophysiology
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Transcranial electrical stimulated motor evoked potential monitoring (TES-MEP) has proven to be a successful and reliable neuromonitoring technique during spinal correction surgery. However, three criteria for TES-MEP monitoring have been described in the literature. This study aims at discussing and comparing the following criteria: (1) the "threshold level criterion" introduced by Calancie et al. (J Neurosurg 88 (1998) 457-70): a more than 100V over more than 1h increase of threshold level to get useful TES-MEP responses indicated neurological impairment; (2) the "amplitude criterion": for TES-MEP monitoring in corrective surgery of the spine, a more than 80% decrease of one or more response amplitudes was considered a valuable criterion for impending neurological deficits by Langeloo et al. (Spine 28 (2003) 1043-50); (3) "the morphology criterion": introduced in 2005 by Quinones et al. (Neurosurgery 56 (2005) 982-93), it is based on the morphology of the MEP-compound muscle action potentials (CMAP). ⋯ Although all methods have been reported to be successful during spinal surgery, the threshold criterion and the morphology change criterion carry several drawbacks. We consider the amplitude reduction method to be most useful during corrective spinal surgery. The sequences of observations and decisions during a TES-MEP monitoring that is based on this criterion are schematized in a flowchart.
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During resection of intramedullary spinal-cord tumors intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring has become a true surgical technology. Motor evoked potentials are the most important modality for this purpose. Its use requires neurophysiological expertise from the surgeon, and a monitoring team in place able to handle the necessary equipment. ⋯ Such adaptation comprises simply waiting for the recordings to spontaneously improve again, irrigating with warm saline solution to wash out blocking potassium. Other measures include the elevation of mean arterial pressure to improve local perfusion. Even staged resection can be considered if intraoperative measures do not sufficiently improve the recordings.