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Behavior of the H-reflex in humans following mechanical perturbation or injury to rostral spinal cord

โœ Scribed by A. A. Leis; H. H. Zhou; M. Mehta; H. L. Harkey III; W. C. Paske


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
896 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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โœฆ Synopsis


In humans H-reflexes are suppressed during early spinal shock. In animals rostral cord injury results in loss of segmental reflexes within seconds. If H-reflexes persist under general anesthesia, can they be used to monitor the integrity of the rostral cord? In part I of this study, we recorded H-reflexes intraoperatively in 25 patients to elucidate general anesthesia effect. In 23 subjects, H-reflexes were consistently elicited, and within +13% of the mrmalized group mean amplitude. In part II, we recorded H-reflexes in 31 patients during spinal cord surgery to elucidate H-reflex behavior immediately following rostral spinal cord injury. In 6, abrupt suppression of the H-reflex coincided with cord injury. In 4 of 6, suppression was transient and less than 50% of baseline; none of these patients developed neurological deficits. In 2, suppression exceeded 90% and persisted throughout surgery; both patients developed profound deficits. We conclude that (1) the H-reflex can be consistently elicited under general anesthesia in most patients, (2) rostral cord injury rapidly suppresses the H-reflex, and (3) the degree and duration of H-reflex suppression reflects the severity of the injury.


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