Monitoring Evoked Potentials Flashcards
What is a diminutive human being without any deformity of physiology?
homunculus
Where do the sensory and motor locations reside?
cortex
What is the arrow pointing to?
Label the shaded areas and describe its location relative to the brain.
cerebral longitudinal fissure
Central sulci
Motor area is more frontal than the sensory area.
What does SSEP represent?
somatosensory evoked potential
If want to monitor SSEP for the feet and legs, what electrodes would be used?
C2, C3, and C4
(C = central sulci)
What defines the somatosensory pathway? (2)
Dorsal (posterior) horns = sensory pathway
Ventral (anterior) horns = motor pathway
Which field will generate an impulse first for SSEP? Far or near field?
What do we try to minimize affecting regarding SSEP monitoring?
What could “P” and “N” possibly represent in an SSEP graph?
Far field occurs earlier (Note: Near field would be considered the cortex.)
Latency and increase amplitude of evoked responses
P = positive excursion, N = negative excursion
Monitoring evoked potentials from the ______ will generate an increased amplitude and decreased latency waveform.
arms rather than the legs
There is less resistance from the arms to the head than from the legs to the head.
What nerves are monitored in SSEP? (2)
Left median nerve
Left tibial nerve
Random activity is generated from an evoked response. How is this activity suppressed?
by averaging the potentials
What can anesthetic drugs do to produce a change in sensory and motor evoked potentials?
Can be mistaken for a surgically induced change
What anesthetic drugs do NOT affect SSEPs? (5)
Etomidate
Droperidol
Ketamine
Opiates
Dexmedetomidine
What anesthetic drugs do NOT affect transcranial MEPs? (4)
Etomidate
Ketamine
Opiates
Dexmedetomidine
What anesthetic drugs DO affect transcranial MEPs? (4)
Barbiturates
Diazepam
Midazolam
Volatile agents
What affect do volatile agents have on latency and amplitude?
Dose dependent increase, volatiles have the greatest effect of all drugs.
It causes the greatest increase on latency and greatest decrease in amplitude.