Purpose: This clinical study was to evaluate changes of evoked spinal cord potentials (ESCPs) elicited by direct spinal cord stimulation and to determine their relation to spinal cord ischemia during aortic aneurysm surgery.
Methods: We monitored descending ESCPs from the thoracic spinal cord and lumbar enlargement after cervical spinal cord stimulation (thoracic descending ESCP and lumbar descending ESCP), and segmental ESCP at lumbar enlargement elicited by bilateral tibial nerve stimulation in 22 aortic aneurysm surgical operations.
Results: ESCP changes were classified into three types: (1) decrease of amplitude in lumbar descending ESCP and segmental ESCP; (2) decrease of amplitude in segmental ESCP alone; (3) decrease of amplitude in all ESCPs. The late negative waves of both lumbar descending ESCP and segmental ESCP were more sensitive than other components of ESCPs. Postoperative paraplegia occurred in the two cases that showed persistent diminution of amplitude in the late negative waves. Segmental ESCP was less reliable than lumbar descending ESCP, because it depended entirely on the adequate perfusion of the lower extremities.
Conclusions: Lumbar descending ESCP was the best method for the spinal cord ischemia during aortic aneurysm surgery. Spinal cord ischemia could be detected by diminution in the amplitude of the late negative wave of lumbar descending ESCP. The recovery amplitude of the late negative wave after declamping correlated with the neurologic outcome.