Association between Postoperative Neck Pain and Intraoperative Transcranial Motor-Evoked Potential Waveforms of the Trapezius Muscles in Patients with Cervical Myelopathy Who Underwent Cervical Laminoplasty
- Author:
Sadayuki ITO
1
;
Yoshihito SAKAI
;
Kei ANDO
;
Hiroaki NAKASHIMA
;
Masaaki MACHINO
;
Naoki SEGI
;
Hiroyuki TOMITA
;
Hiroyuki KOSHIMIZU
;
Tetsuro HIDA
;
Kenyu ITO
;
Atsushi HARADA
;
Shiro IMAGAMA
Author Information
- Publication Type:Clinical Study
- From:Asian Spine Journal 2023;17(2):330-337
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Methods:A total of 79 patients with cervical myelopathy who underwent cervical laminoplasty at our facility between June 2010 and March 2013 were included in this study. Intraoperative control and final waveform were evaluated based on the trapezius muscle MEPs by measuring the latency and amplitude. A neck pain group comprised patients with higher neck pain Visual Analog Scale scores from preoperative value to 1 year postoperatively. The cross-sectional areas of the trapezius muscles and the MEP latencies and amplitudes were compared between patients with and without neck pain.
Results:The latency and amplitude of the control waveforms were not significantly different between groups. The neck pain group had a significantly shorter final waveform latency (neck pain: 23.6±2.5, no neck pain: 25.8±4.5; p =0.019) and significantly larger amplitude (neck pain: 2,125±1,077, no neck pain: 1,630±966; p =0.041) than the no neck pain group.
Conclusions:Postoperative neck pain was associated with the final waveform latency and amplitude of the trapezius muscle MEPs during cervical laminoplasty. Intraoperative electrophysiological trapezius muscle abnormalities could cause postoperative neck pain.