Motor and Somatosensory Evoked Potentials Are Well Maintained in Patients Given Dexmedetomidine during Spine Surgery

Author:

Bala Endrit1,Sessler Daniel I.2,Nair Dileep R.3,McLain Robert4,Dalton Jarrod E.5,Farag Ehab6

Affiliation:

1. Research Fellow.

2. Chair, Department of Outcomes Research.

3. Staff, Epilepsy Center.

4. Professor of Surgery, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, and Staff, Cleveland Clinic Center for Spine Health and Department of Orthopedic Surgery.

5. Biostatistician, Departments of Quantitative Health Sciences and Outcomes Research.

6. Staff Anesthesiologist, Departments of General Anesthesia and Outcomes Research, and Assistant Professor, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, The Cleveland Clinic.

Abstract

Background Many commonly used anesthetic agents produce a dose-dependent amplitude reduction and latency prolongation of evoked responses, which may impair diagnosis of intraoperative spinal cord injury. Dexmedetomidine is increasingly used as an adjunct for general anesthesia. Therefore, the authors tested the hypothesis that dexmedetomidine does not have a clinically important effect on somatosensory and transcranial motor evoked responses. Methods Thirty-seven patients were enrolled and underwent spinal surgery with instrumentation during desflurane and remifentanil anesthesia with dexmedetomidine as an anesthetic adjunct. Upper- and lower-extremity transcranial motor evoked potentials and somatosensory evoked potentials were recorded during four defined periods: baseline without dexmedetomidine; two periods with dexmedetomidine (0.3 and 0.6 ng/ml), in a randomly determined order; and a final period 1 h after drug discontinuation. The primary outcomes were amplitude and latency of P37/N20, and amplitude, area under the curve, and voltage threshold for transcranial motor evoked potential stimulation. Results Of the total, data from 30 patients were evaluated. Use of dexmedetomidine, as an anesthetic adjunct, did not have an effect on the latency or amplitude of sensory evoked potentials greater than was prespecified as clinically relevant, and though the authors were unable to claim equivalence on the amplitude of transcranial motor evoked responses due to variability, recordings were made throughout the study in all patients. Conclusion Use of dexmedetomidine as an anesthetic adjunct at target plasma concentrations up to 0.6 ng/ml does not change somatosensory or motor evoked potential responses during complex spine surgery by any clinically significant amount.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference42 articles.

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