Background: The risk of neurological injury is inherent during surgical positioning for patients
with unstable surgical spine and patients with severe myelopathic changes. The role
of Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM) and anesthetic drug optimization
in these scenarios are not well defined. This review is aimed to study the impact
of choice and dosing of anesthetic drugs for obtaining consistent multimodal IONM
signals and predicting early neurological deficits during surgical positioning of
patients with cervical spine disorders.
Materials and Methods: Data from 56 adult patients undergoing cervical spine surgeries for spondylotic or
traumatic myelopathy under IONM were reviewed (January 2017–June 2019). Data regarding
anesthesia drugs, intubation technique, time to obtain consistent IONM signals, IONM
data before and after positioning, and any corrective measures after positioning were
collected and analyzed.
Results: Complete data were obtained form 46 patients. The patients were induced with fentanyl
(2 µg/kg), propofol (2 mg/kg) and after checking mask ventilation atracurium (0.4
mg/kg) intravenous (IV) administration. All patients were intubated with manual inline
stabilization. Anesthesia was maintained with propofol (75 µg/kg/min) and fentanyl
(0.5 µg/kg/h). Motor and sensory evoked potentials (MEP and SSEP) were recorded every
10 minutes. The mean time required for obtaining SSEP signals were 15 ± 3 minutes
and for MEP signals were 20 ± 5 minutes. In 43 patients, there was no significant
change in IONM signals during positioning. In three patients, significant drop in
IONM signals without change in EEG signals indicating local neurological injury. Surgical
positioning was immediately adjusted to obtain baseline signals.
Conclusions: This study highlights the anesthetic feasibility of utilizing multimodal IONM during
surgical positioning to predict and correct any position related neurological deficits
prior to the start of definitive surgery. Prospective studies with adequate sample
size will be needed to standardize the anesthetic protocol in these scenarios.