Publication | Closed Access
Success Rate of Motor Evoked Potentials for Intraoperative Neurophysiologic Monitoring: Effects of Age, Lesion Location, and Preoperative Neurologic Deficits
100
Citations
9
References
2007
Year
Motor ControlSocial SciencesStimulation DeviceLesion LocationTranscranial Electrical StimulationBrain InjuryNeurologySuccess RateMotor NeurophysiologyCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurorehabilitationMotor Evoked PotentialsMyogenic MotorSpinal Cord InjuryNeurological MonitoringRehabilitationNeurostimulationBrain StimulationNeurophysiologyMotor SystemSpinal TraumaNeuroscienceElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Transcranial electrical stimulation with myogenic motor evoked potential (MEP) recording was used for intraoperative neurophysiologic monitoring in 341 consecutive "high-risk" neurosurgical or orthopedic procedures. Overall, the success rate for establishing reliable MEP response was 94.8% for upper extremities and 66.6% for lower extremities. The rate was only 39.1% for lower extremities in patients with preoperative motor deficit and up to 81% in neurologically intact adults. Further analysis demonstrated that extremes of age or the presence of a lesion in the spinal cord and motor deficit contributed to failure in obtaining reliable MEPs.
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