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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 41, 251-254, Copyright © 1986 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
JC Pollock, MP Jamieson and R McWilliam
Cortical somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) monitoring was used in 15
patients 2 to 50 years old undergoing repair of aortic coarctation to
detect the onset of spinal cord ischemia during the cross-clamp period.
Three different response patterns were observed. In 8 patients (53%), the
SEP remained unchanged throughout the cross-clamping. This was designated a
type 1 response. Six patients (40%) showed a gradual deterioration in the
SEP after 15 minutes of cross-clamping (type 2 response). All SEPs returned
to normal levels within 5 minutes of release of the clamp. One patient (7%)
demonstrated a decline in SEP commencing prior to the application of the
cross-clamp when an intercostal vessel was controlled with slings. The SEP
completely disappeared within 5 minutes of cross-clamping, but after 19
minutes the repair was completed and the SEP returned within 3 minutes of
reperfusion (type 3 response). No patient sustained neurological sequelae
of repair. We believe that SEP monitoring offers the potential to identify
the patient at risk of developing spinal cord ischemia intraoperatively
before irreversible damage occurs. However, it is susceptible to deep
halothane anesthesia, which abolishes all cortical responses and requires
expert monitoring.
ARTICLES
Somatosensory evoked potentials in the detection of spinal cord ischemia in aortic coarctation repair
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