Title of article :
Attenuation of Motor Evoked Potentials Following Prone Positioning
Author/Authors :
Apostolakis, Sotirios Department of Neurosurgery - KAT General Hospital of Attica, Kifisia, Greece , Karagianni, Aikaterini Department of Neurosurgery - KAT General Hospital of Attica, Kifisia, Greece , Chiotaki, Eirini Intraoperative Monitoring Service - GE Scientific, G. Vasios & Co, Ioannina, Greece , Vlachos, Konstantinos Department of Neurosurgery - KAT General Hospital of Attica, Kifisia, Greece
Abstract :
Background and Importance: Of utmost importance for successful neurosurgical operations is
proper patient positioning. This is particularly the case for operations conducted in the prone
position, which is associated with several potential complications.
Case Presentation: Here we report the case of a 52-year-old male patient who underwent
endoscopic discectomy for L5-S1 herniated disc. Following placement in the prone position,
Motor Evoked Potentials (MEP) were significantly asymmetric, with those from the left side being
disproportionately low considering his clinical presentation. MEP recordings were ameliorated
when the patient was placed in the supine position. Considering the nervous and vascular anatomy
of the area, a peripheral insult is highly unlikely to be the cause of the neurophysiological profile of
this patient. Instead, compression of the dural sac due to biomechanical alterations of the contents
of the spinal canal is the most possible pathogenetic mechanism.
Conclusion: Proper patient positioning is of paramount importance for the success of a
neurosurgical operation. Still, even if all precautions are taken, it is possible that insults to neuronal
structures can be due to biomechanical alterations of the contents of the spinal canal, secondary
to prone positioning.
Keywords :
Endoscopic discectomy , Herniated disk , Motor evoked potentials , Prone position , Spine surgery
Journal title :
Iranian Journal of Neurosurgery