Acta Orthopaedica et Traumatologica Turcica (May 2019)

Kyphosis – A risk factor for positioning brachial plexopathy during spinal surgeries

  • Mirza Biscevic,
  • Aida Sehic,
  • Sejla Biscevic,
  • Ismet Gavrankapetanovic,
  • Barbara Smrke,
  • Damir Vukomanovic,
  • Ferid Krupic

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 3
pp. 199 – 202

Abstract

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Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the differences in transcranial electric motor-evoked potentials – TceMEP on upper limbs and the incidences of postoperative brachial plexopathy between patients with kyphotic and scoliotic trunk shapes. Methods: In the period of January 2011–January 2017, 61 consecutive patients (mean age: 18.4 years ± 4.4 years (range: 10–32)) with pediatric spinal deformity underwent surgery in our Department. Eight of them had a kyphotic trunk deformity (Scheuermann kyphosis, neurofibromatosis, posterior thoracic hemivertebra), and the rest of the 53 patients had a scoliotic trunk deformity (mostly adolescent idiopathic scoliosis – AIS, lateral hemivertebra). The TceMEP recordings in all four limbs were analyzed every 30 min, or upon the surgeon's command. Upper limb TceMEP recordings were used as a control of systemic and anesthetic related changes, and as the indicator of positioning brachial plexopathy. Results: Four out of 8 patients (50.0%) from the kyphotic group experienced noteworthy decreases in TceMEP amplitude (≥65%) in one or both arms, and only 2 out of 53 patients (3.8%) from the scoliotic group, confirming significant statistical difference (Chi-square 16.75, p < 0.05). Two out of 8 patients with decreases in TceMEP amplitude suffered from transitory postoperative brachial plexopathy, and both of them were from the kyphotic group. Conclusion: It seems that kyphotic trunks have a higher risk for positioning-related brachial plexopathy, probably due to distribution of trunk's weight onto only four points (two iliac bones and two shoulders), compared to the scoliotic trunks that have wider weight-bearing areas. We emphasize the importance of proper patient positioning and close intraoperative neuro-monitoring of all four limbs in more than one channel per limb. Level of Evidence: Level IV Therapeutic Study. Keywords: Brachial plexopathy, Motor-evoked potentials, Spine deformity, Trunk, Kyphosis, Scoliosis