Variability of somatosensory cortical evoked potentials during spinal surgery: Effects of anesthetic technique and high-pass digital filtering

Cor J. Kalkman*, Suzanne A. Brink, Henk D. Been, James G. Bovill

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

40 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The effects of anesthetic technique (nitrous oxide or propofol) and high-pass digital filtering on within-patient variability of posterior tibial nerve somatosensory cortical evoked potentials (PTN-SCEP) were compared prospectively in two groups of 20 patients undergoing spinal surgery. Average P1N1 amplitude was significantly higher and P1N1 amplitude variability lower during propofol/alfentanil anesthesia than during nitrous oxide/ alfentanil anesthesia. Off-line 30-Hz high-pass digital filtering significantly reduced P1N1 amplitude variability without decreasing P1N1 amplitude. In 93 patients studied retrospectively, a significant negative logarithmic correlation (r = -0.77) was observed between P1N1 amplitude and P1N1 amplitude variability. This study shows the importance of maintaining the highest possible PTNSCEP amplitudes during spinal surgery. Propofol/opioid anesthesia may be an alternative anesthetic technique to nitrous oxide/opioid anesthesia during spinal cord function monitoring.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)924-929
Number of pages6
JournalSpine
Volume16
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 1991

Keywords

  • Physiologic spinal cord monitoring
  • Somatosensory evoked potentials
  • Spinal surgery

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