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Motor versus somatosensory evoked potential changes after acute experimental spinal cord injury in rats
Authors:M Zileli  J Schramm MD
Institution:(1) Departments of Neurosurgery, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany;(2) Faculty of Medicine, Aegean University, Bornova, Izmir, Turkey;(3) Neurosurgical Clinic, University of Bonn, Sigmund-Freud-Strasse 25, D-W-5300 Bonn-Venusberg, Germany
Abstract:Summary In this study, averaged cortical somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) after sciatic nerve stimulation, and lower extremity muscle responses after motor cortex stimulation (MEP) were compared in rats. 10 animals served as light (25g-cm) and 10 animals as severe (80g-cm) acute spinal cord injury group after weight dropping trauma. After the initial loss of components, both SEP and MEP recovered in most cases in the light injury group. In the severe injury group, however, no recovery was observed in cortical SEPs, while the muscle MEP recovered in some animals. Light spinal cord injury had little effect on muscle MEPs and caused a paradoxical amplitude increase in some MEP recordings. Latency values of muscle MEPs did not show great changes after either kind of injury, while cortical SEP latency was considerably delayed.In this model cortical SEPs were more sensitive to light spinal cord injury than muscle MEPs after single electrical cortical stimuli. Severe spinal cord injury caused amplitude changes or loss of waves from both SEP and MEP.This work was partly presented in the poster sections at ldquo39. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie, Köln (F. R. G., May 8-1, 1988rdquo and ldquoCongress of the International Medical Society of Motor Disturbances, Rome, Italy, June 2–4, 1988rdquo.
Keywords:Motor evoked potential  muscle response  somatosensory evoked potential  spinal cord injury  spinal cord monitoring
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