4.6 Article

Identification of injury type using somatosensory and motor evoked potentials in a rat spinal cord injury model

Journal

NEURAL REGENERATION RESEARCH
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 422-427

Publisher

WOLTERS KLUWER MEDKNOW PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.4103/1673-5374.346458

Keywords

contusion injury; dislocation injury; distraction injury; electrophysiology; heterogeneity; histopathology; injury mechanism; motor evoked potential; somatosensory evoked potential; spinal cord injury

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This study investigated the electrophysiological and histopathological changes in contusion, distraction, and dislocation spinal cord injuries using a rat model. The results showed that different types of injuries caused different levels of damage to specific spinal cord regions, resulting in varying somatosensory and motor evoked potential responses. Additionally, the study found significant correlations between histological and electrophysiological findings and injury types. Intraoperative monitoring of somatosensory and motor evoked potentials has the potential to identify the type of iatrogenic spinal cord injury during surgery.
The spinal cord is at risk of injury during spinal surgery. If intraoperative spinal cord injury is identified early, irreversible impairment or loss of neurological function can be prevented. Different types of spinal cord injury result in damage to different spinal cord regions, which may cause different somatosensory and motor evoked potential signal responses. In this study, we examined electrophysiological and histopathological changes between contusion, distraction, and dislocation spinal cord injuries in a rat model. We found that contusion led to the most severe dorsal white matter injury and caused considerable attenuation of both somatosensory and motor evoked potentials. Dislocation resulted in loss of myelinated axons in the lateral region of the injured spinal cord along the rostrocaudal axis. The amplitude of attenuation in motor evoked potential responses caused by dislocation was greater than that caused by contusion. After distraction injury, extracellular spaces were slightly but not significantly enlarged; somatosensory evoked potential responses slightly decreased and motor evoked potential responses were lost. Correlation analysis showed that histological and electrophysiological findings were significantly correlated and related to injury type. Intraoperative monitoring of both somatosensory and motor evoked potentials has the potential to identify iatrogenic spinal cord injury type during surgery.

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