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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 10, 93-103, Copyright © 1996 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
JM Guerit, R Verhelst, J Rubay, G Khoury, A Matta and R Dion
The usefulness of somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) monitoring as a
means of preventing paraplegia in descending aorta surgery was evaluated in
47 consecutive cases operated on for isthmic (14 cases), thoracic (22
cases), or thoraco-abdominal (11 cases) repair. An aortic dissection was
found in 11 cases (acute in 6). Somatosensory evoked potentials were
obtained by unilateral left and right posterior tibial nerve (PTN)
stimulation at the ankle and recordings were performed on four channels:
peripheral nerve, lumbar spinal, brain-stem, and cortical recordings. Our
experience led to the following current strategy: the establishment of
atrio(aorto)-femoral(aortic) bypass (29 cases), proximal and distal aortic
cross-clamping, aortic repair with reimplantation of the culprit
artery(ies) as indicated by SEP alterations. Five types of SEP alterations
were defined on the basis of the neural level involved: type I (27.7% of
cases) = distal spinal ischemia due to proximal aortic cross-clamping in
the absence of bypass; type II (21.3%) = PTN ischemia due to left common
femoral artery cross-clamping; type III (12.8%) = segmental spinal ischemia
due to the exclusion of critical feeding arteries; type IV (4.3%) =
ischemia in the left carotid artery territory; type V (4.3%) = global brain
hypoperfusion due to systemic hypotension. Forty-five patients survived the
operation and could be tested for neurological dysfunction. Three patients
presented a postoperative spinal cord deficit, but this deficit was already
present preoperatively in one case, so that the actual incidence of a new
paraplegia in our series was 2/45 cases (4.4%). One of the two cases was
clearly a delayed paraplegia with SEP alterations appearing several hours
after the operation. Somatosensory evoked potentials were evaluated on the
basis of their sensitivity, specificity, and impact on the surgical
strategy. Regarding SEP sensitivity, we did not encounter any unexpected
immediate paraplegia, but the critical factor appeared to be the duration
of SEP absence due to spinal cord ischemia, which, according to the
literature, should never exceed 30 min; after a longer absence, SEP return
does not guarantee neurological recovery. Somatosensory evoked potential
specificity was also 100%, but only 58% of the abnormalities found were
actually consequent to spinal cord ischemia, the rest of the abnormalities
being consequent to peripheral nerve or brain ischemia. Finally, SEP
monitoring had a significant impact on surgical strategy in 19% of the
cases. It is concluded that distal aortic perfusion and multilevel SEP
monitoring play a significant role in preventing paraplegia in descending
aorta surgery.
ARTICLES
Multilevel somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) for spinal cord monitoring in descending thoracic and thoraco-abdominal aortic surgery
Clinical Neurophysiology Unit, Cliniques Universitaires St.-Luc, Brussels, Belgium.
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