Title: Neurological Monitoring
1Neurological Monitoring
- Augusto Torres, MD
- Department of Anesthesiology
- MetroHealth Medical Center
- April 2009
www.anaesthesia.co.in anaesthesia.co.in_at_gmail.co
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2Outline
- EEG
- SSEP
- MEP
- Transcranial Doppler
- Cerebral Oximetry
3EEG
- Electroencephalogram surface recordings of the
summation of excitatory and inhibitory
postsynaptic potentials generated by pyramidal
cells in cerebral cortex - EEG
- Measures electrical function of brain
- Indirectly measures blood flow
- Measures anesthetic effects
4EEG
- Three uses perioperatively
- Identify inadequate blood flow to cerebral cortex
caused by surgical/anesthetic-induced reduction
in flow - Guide reduction of cerebral metabolism prior to
induced reduction of blood flow - Predict neurologic outcome after brain insult
- Other uses identify consciousness,
unconsciousness, seizure activity, stages of
sleep, coma
5EEG
- Electrodes placed so that mapping system relates
surface head anatomy to underlying brain cortical
regions
6EEG
- 3 parameters of the signal
- Amplitude size or voltage of signal
- Frequency number of times signal oscillates
- Time duration of the sampling of the signal
- Normal EEG characteristic frequency (beta, then
alpha) with symmetrical signals
7EEG
- Abnormal EEG
- Regional problems - asymmetry in frequency,
amplitude or unpredicted patterns of such - Epilepsy high voltage spike with slow waves
- Ischemia slowing frequency with preservation of
amplitude or loss of amplitude (severe) - Global problems affects entire brain, symmetric
abnormalities - Anesthetic agents induce global changes similar
to global ischemia or hypoxemia (control of
anesthetic technique is important)
8Abnormal EEG
9EEG
- The gold standard for intra-op EEG monitoring
continuous visual inspection of a 16- to
32-channel analog EEG by experienced
electroencephalographer - Processed EEG methods of converting raw EEG to
a plot showing voltage, frequency, and time - Monitors fewer channels, less experience required
- Reasonable results obtained
10Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Anesthetic drugs affect frequency and amplitude
of EEG waveforms - Subanesthetic doses of IV and inhaled anesthetics
(0.3 MAC) - Increases frontal beta activity (low voltage,
high frequency) - Light anesthesia (0.5 MAC)
- Larger voltage, slower frequency
11Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- General anesthesia (1 MAC)
- Irregular slow activity
- Deeper anesthesia (1.25 MAC)
- Alternating activity
- Very deep anesthesia (1.6 MAC)
- Burst suppression ? eventually isoelectric
12Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Some agents totally suppress EEG activity (e.g.
isoflurane) - Some agents never produce burst suppression or an
isoelectric EEG - Incapable (e.g. benzodiazipines)
- Toxicity (e.g. halothane) prevents giving large
enough dose
13Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Barbiturates, propofol, etomidate
- Initial activation, then dose-related depression,
results in EEG silence - Thiopental increasing doses will reduce oxygen
requirements from neuronal activity - Basal requirements (metabolic activity) reduced
by hypothermia - Epileptiform activity with methohexital and
etomidate in subhypnotic doses
14Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Ketamine
- Activates EEG at low doses (1mg/kg), slowing at
higher doses - Cannot achieve electrocortical silence
- Also associated with epileptiform activity in
patients with epilepsy - Benzodiazepines
- Produce typical EEG pattern
- No burst suppression or isoelectric EEG
15Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Opioids
- Slowing of EEG
- No burst suppression
- High dose epileptiform activity
- Normeperidine
- Nitrous oxide
- Minor changes, decrease in amplitude and frontal
high-frequency activity - No burst suppression
16Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane
- EEG activation at low concentrations slowing,
eventually electrical silence at higher
concentrations - Isoflurane
- Periods of suppression at 1.5 MAC
- Electrical silence at 2 2.5 MAC
17Anesthetic Agents and EEG
- Enflurane
- Seizure activity with hyperventilation and high
concentrations (gt1.5 MAC) - Halothane
- 3-4 MAC necessary for burst suppression
- Cardiovascular collapse
18Non-anesthetic Factors Affecting EEG Miller et al.
- Surgical
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
- Occlusion of major cerebral vessel (carotid
cross-clamping, aneurysm clipping) - Retraction on cerebral cortex
- Surgically induced emboli to brain
- Pathophysiologic Factors
- Hypoxemia
- Hypotension
- Hypothermia
- Hypercarbia and hypocarbia
19Intraoperative Use of EEG
- EEG used to monitor for ischemia
- Avoid during critical periods of the case
- Changing anesthetic technique
- Changing gas levels
- Administering boluses of medications that affect
EEG
20Intraoperative Use of EEG
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
- Theoretically beneficial
- Embolic events with cannulation
- Increased risk in patients with carotid disease
- Difficult to interpret EEG changes
- Alteration of arterial carbon dioxide tension
- Changes in blood pressure
- Hypothermia
- Hemodilution (anemia)
21Intraoperative Use of EEG
- Carotid endarterectomy
- Well-established
- 20 of patients with major EEG changes awaken
with neurological deficits - Normal cerebral blood flow 50mL/100g/min
- Cellular survival threatened 12mL/100g/min
- EEG changes seen at 20mL/100g/min
- With isoflurane EEG changes not seen until
10mL/100g/min - If EEG changes noted, intervene
- Shunting
- Increase CBF
22Intraoperative Use of EEG
- Limitations to EEG for CEA
- Need for experienced technician to monitor
- Strokes still occur despite normal intra-op EEG
- Subcortical events not monitored by EEG
- Not proven to reduce incidence of stroke
- False positives
23Intraoperative Use of EEG
- What to do if EEG technician indicates a possible
problem? - Check to see if anesthetic milieu is stable
- Rule out hypoxemia, hypotension, hypothermia,
hypercarbia and hypocarbia - Raise the MAP, obtain ABG
- See if there is a surgical reason
24Evoked Potentials
- Definition electrical activity generated in
response to sensory or motor stimulus - Stimulus given, then neural response is recorded
at different points along pathway - Sensory evoked potential
- Latency time from stimulus to onset of SER
- Amplitude voltage of recorded response
25Sensory Evoked Potential
- Sensory evoked potentials
- Somatosensory (SSEP)
- Auditory (BAEP)
- Visual (VEP)
- SSEP produced by electrically stimulating a
cranial or peripheral nerve - If peripheral n. stimulated can record
proximally along entire tract (peripheral n.,
spinal cord, brainstem, thalamus, cerebral
cortex) - As opposed to EEG, records subcortically
26Sensory Evoked Potential
- Responds to injury by increased latency,
decreased amplitude, ultimately disappearance - Problem is response non-specific
- Surgical injury
- Hypoperfusion/ischemia
- Changes in anesthetic drugs
- Temperature changes
27Sensory Evoked Potentials
- Signals easily disrupted by background electrical
activity (ECG, EMG activity of muscle movement,
etc) - Baseline is essential to subsequent interpretation
28SSEPs
- Stimulation with fine needle electrodes
- Stimulate median nerve signal travels
anterograde causing muscle twitch, also travels
retrograde up sensory pathways along dorsal
columns all the way to brain cortex
29SSEPs
- Can measure the electrophysiologic response to
nerve stimulation all the way up this pathway - Monitor many waves (representing different nerves
along pathway) and localization of where the
neural pathway is interrupted is possible
30Intraoperative SSEPs
- Neurologic pathway must be at risk and
intervention must be available - Indications
- Scoliosis correction
- Spinal cord decompression and stabilization after
acute injury - Brachial plexus exploration
- Resection of spinal cord tumor
- Resection of intracranial lesions involving
sensory cortex - Clipping of intracranial aneurysms
- Carotid endarterectomy
- Thoracic aortic aneurysm repair
31Intraoperative SSEPs
- Scoliosis surgery well established
- Lessen degree of spine straightening
- False-negatives rare, false positives more common
- Motor tracts not directly monitored
- Posterior spinal arteries supply dorsal columns
- Anterior spinal arteries supply anterior (motor)
tracts - Possible to have significant motor deficit
postoperatively despite normal SSEPs - SSEPs generally correlate well with spinal
column surgery - Poor correlation in thoracic aortic surgery
32Intraoperative SSEPs
- Carotid endarterectomy
- Similar sensitivity has been found between SSEP
and EEG - SSEP has advantage of monitoring subcortical
ischemia - SSEP disadvantage do not monitor anterior
portions - frontal or temporal lobes
33Intraoperative SSEPs
- Cerebral Aneurysm
- SSEP can gauge adequacy of blood flow to anterior
cerebral circulation - Evaluate effects of temporary clipping and
identify unintended occlusion of perforating
vessels supplying internal capsule in the
aneurysm clip
34Other SEPs
- Auditory (BAEP) rapid clicks elicit responses
- CN VIII, cochlear nucleus, rostral brainstem,
inferior colliculus, auditory cortex - Procedures near auditory pathway and posterior
fossa - Decompression of CN VII, resection of acoustic
neuroma, sectioning CNVIII for intractable
tinnitus - Resistant to anesthetic drugs
35Other SEPs
- VEP flash stimulation of retina assess pathway
from optic n. to occipital cortex - Procedures near optic chiasm
- Very sensitive to anesthetic drugs and variable
signals - unreliable
36Anesthetic Agents and SEPs
- Most anesthetic drugs increase latency and
decrease amplitude - Volatile agents increase latency, decrease
amplitude - Barbituates increase in latency, decrease
amplitude - Exceptions
- Nitrous oxide latency stable, decrease amplitude
- Etomidate increases latency, increase in
amplitude - Ketamine increases amplitude
- Opiods no clinically significant changes
- Muscle relaxants no changes
37Physiologic Factors and SEPs
- All of these affect SSEPs
- Hypotension
- Hyperthermia and hypothermia
- Mild hypothermia (35-36 degrees) minimal effect
- Hypoxemia
- Hypercapnea
- Significant anemia (HCT lt15)
- Technical factor poor electode-to skin-contact
and high electrical impedence (eg electrocautery)
38Anesthetic ManagementSchubert Clinical
Neuroanesthesia
- Stable, constant anesthetic level, especially
during critical periods - Response to poor signal
- Rule out technical factors
- Electrode impedance, radio frequency interference
- Cortical vs. subcortical changes
39Anesthetic ManagementSchubert Clinical
Neuroanesthesia
- Rule out systemic factors
- KEY improve neural tissue blood flow and
nutrient delivery - Intravascular volume and cardiac performance
optimized (crystalloid/colloid or blood) to
increase oxygen-carrying capacity optimal HCT
30 or higher - Elevate MAP
- Blood gas assure oxygenation, normocarbia to
help improve collateral blood supply if
hypocarbic - Consider steroids (shown to work with traumatic
spinal cord injury) - Mannitol improve microcirculatory flow and
reducing interstitial cord edema
40Anesthetic ManagementSchubert Clinical
Neuroanesthesia
- Rule out neurological factors
- Brain and spinal cord ischemia
- Pneumocephalus
- Peripheral n. ischemia and compression
41Motor Evoked Potentials
- Transcranial electrical MEP monitoring
- Stimulating electrodes placed on scalp overlying
motor cortex - Application of electrical current produces MEP
- Stimulus propagated through descending motor
pathways
42Motor Evoked Potentials
- Evoked responses may be recorded
- Spinal cord, peripheral n., muscle itself
43Motor Evoked Potentials
- MEPs very sensitive to anesthetic agents
- Possibly due to anesthetic depression of anterior
horn cells in spinal cord - Intravenous agents produce significantly less
depression - TIVA often used
- No muscle relaxant
44Transcranial Doppler
- Direct, noninvasive measurement of CBF
- Sound waves transmitted through thin temporal
bone, contact blood, are reflected, and detected - Most easily monitor middle cerebral artery
45Transcranial Doppler
- Does not measure actual blood flow but velocity
- Velocity often closely related to flow but two
are not equivalent - Surgical field may limit probe placement and
maintenance of proper position - Carotid endarterectomy
- Measure adequacy of CBF during clamping
- Technically difficult in 20
- Useful for detecting embolic events How much
emboli is harmful?
46Transcranial Doppler
- CPB
- Detect air or particulate emboli during
cannulation, during bypass, weaning from bypass,
decannulation - Significant data pending
- Detection of vasospasm (well-established)
- Smaller area increase in velocity (gt120cm/s)
47Cerebral Oximetry (Near infrared spectroscopy)
- Measures oxygen saturation in the vascular bed of
the cerebral cortex - Interrogates arterial, venous, capillary blood
within field - Derived saturation represents a tissue oxygen
saturation measured from these three compartments - Unlike pulse oximetry (requires pulsatile blood),
NIRS assess the hemoglobin saturation of venous
blood, which along with capillary blood, composes
approximately 90 of the blood volume in tissues - Believed to reflect the oxygen saturation of
hemoglobin in the post extraction compartment of
any particular tissue - Measures tissue oxygen saturation
48Cerebral Oximetry (Near infrared spectroscopy)
- Concerns
- Measures small portion of frontal cortex,
contributions from non-brain sources - Temperature changes affect NIR absorption water
spectrum - Degree of contamination of the signal by
chromophores in the skin can be appreciable and
are variable - Not validated threshold for regional oxygen
saturation not known (20 reduction from
baseline?) - High intersubject variability
- Low specificity
- Rigamonti et al. (J Clin Anesth 200517426)
- Compared EEG to rSO2 in CEA in terms of
predicting need to place shunt 44 sens 84 spec
49Conclusion
- EEG is a useful modality for measuring
intraoperative cerebral perfusion - SSEP offers the additional advantage of measuring
subcortical adverse events - New techniques for neurological monitoring are
being developed which need to be further
evaluated and validated
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