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Observations on electrical stimulation of lumbosacral nerve roots in children with and without lower limb spasticity
Authors:Paul Steinbok  Lisa Langill  D. Douglas Cochrane  Robert Keyes
Affiliation:(1) Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada;(2) Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada;(3) Department of Neurosurgery, B.C.'s Children's Hospital, 4480 Oak Street, V6H 3V4 Vancouver, B.C., Canada;(4) Department of Diagnostic Neurophysiology, B.C.'s Children's Hospital, 4480 Oak Street, V6H 3V4 Vancouver, B.C., Canada;(5) Division of Neurology, B.C.'s Children's Hospital, 4480 Oak Street, V6H 3V4 Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Abstract:
Selective functional posterior rhizotomy (SFPR) is a popular operation for the treatment of spasticity in children with cerebral palsy, but the physiologic basis of the procedure is poorly understood. As part of SFPR operations in 60 consecutive children, the responses to electrical stimulation of posterior lumbosacral roots and rootlets, and the corresponding anterior roots were studied. In addition, similar electrical stimulation of posterior roots was performed in four nonspastic ldquocontrolrdquo children. Sustained responses to 50 Hz stimulation, one of the criteria used to signify abnormality in the spastic children, was found frequently in the ldquocontrolrdquo children. Contralateral spreal to the lower limb muscles and suprasegmental spread to the upper limbs, face, and neck were determined to be the most valid criteria which differentiated abnormal from normal responses. Stimulation of anterior nerve roots at 50 Hz caused sustained responses and ipsilateral lower limb spread, at a low threshold compared to that of corresponding posterior roots. The results of this study bring into question the validity of some of the criteria that are used to select abnormal posterior rootlets in the SFPR procedure, and suggest criteria that may be more valid based on findings in nonspastic children.
Keywords:Electrical stimulation  Spasticity  Nerve root stimulation  Selective posterior rhizotomy
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