Neuromonitoring for spine surgery in children

Orthop Traumatol Surg Res. 2024 Feb;110(1S):103780. doi: 10.1016/j.otsr.2023.103780. Epub 2023 Dec 1.

Abstract

Neuromonitoring or electrophysiologic monitoring is now an essential component of pediatric spine surgery due to the high number of spinal deformity indications in asymptomatic patients, for whom any neurological complication would be disastrous. Technological advances have led to the development of compact monitors that allow surgeons themselves to monitor the motor evoked potentials (MEP) perioperatively. This shift happened because it was difficult to always have a neurophysiologist in the operating room. Unfortunately, this also means that multimodal monitoring (sensory, mixed, D-wave, electromyography, pedicle screws) is much more difficult to implement. There are absolute indications, such as any spinal deformity without neurological deficit and relative indications, which are more difficult to interpret. Technical incidents frequently occur before the start of the surgery. If no replacement device is available, the procedure must be cancelled unless the patient's life or function are at risk. At least two monitoring systems should be available at every facility to avoid having to cancel surgery for purely technological reasons. Once the surgical procedure has started, the absence of MEP recruitment curves in the upper and lower limbs is likely due to the anesthesia depth; the surgery should be stopped until this problem is corrected. When there is a true intraoperative alert (MEPs disappear in the lower limbs only), we propose taking the following steps, depending on whether the spine is stable or unstable: remove the causal implant, remove all hardware, preserve any stabilization devices, initiate an intraoperative wake-up test, verify conditions under which the intervention should continue. Level of evidence: V.

Keywords: Child; Kyphosis; Neuromonitoring; Scoliosis; Spine surgery.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Evoked Potentials, Motor / physiology
  • Humans
  • Monitoring, Intraoperative / methods
  • Nervous System Diseases*
  • Pedicle Screws*
  • Spine / surgery