Volume 1 Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
What two tracts make up the dorsal lemniscal sensory system? | cuneatus and gracilis tracts |
Where are the cuneatus and gracilis tracts of the dorsal lemniscal system located? | in the posterior (dorsal) cord |
What sensations do the cuneatus and gracilis tracts carry? | sensations of touch, pressure and vibration |
The integrity of the cuneatus and gracilis tracts is assessed by what? | somatosensory evoked potentials: SSEP |
Touch, pressure, and vibration sensations are carried into the spinal cord vie the __ __. | dorsal horn |
Touch, pressure, and vibration asend on the ipsilateral or contralateral side? | ipsilateral |
Where do the sensations of touch, pressure, and vibration cross over? | the brain stem |
The sensations of touch, pressure and vibration cross over in the brainstem to which two locations? | contralateral thalamus and primary sensory cortex |
In addition to traveling directly to the primary sensory cortex, sensory information is also transmitted into the __. | Reticular activating system (RAS) |
In the RAS what happens to sensory information? | it percolates upward and spreads throughout the cerebral cortex |
The RAS serves as an ___ route by which sensory information reaches the cerebral cortex | indirect |
The RAS functions to maintain the ____ state. | alert/awake |
What happens to the RAS when we go to sleep? | shuts off |
General Anesthethis produce sedation and hypnosis (sleep) by doing what? | depressing the RAS |
Complete loss of RAS activity is called __. | coma |
What is the purpose of SSEP monitoring? | to evaluate the integrity of the brain or spinal cord during certain types of surdery |
What operations are the gracilis and cuneatus tracts of the posterior spinal cord assessed during? | spine operations, carotid endardarectomy, aortic surgery, or repair of intracranial aneurysms |
What happens if there is posterior cord ischemia or brain ischemia? | transmission of action potnetials through the posterior cord and/or brain is diminished, thereby reducing the intensity and delaying the arrival of action potentials reaching the cerebral cortex |
What 3 nerves may be stimulated to elicit somatosensory evoked potentials? | tibial, median, or ulnar nerves |
Somatosensory evoked potentials are recorded from where? | the scalp |
The sciatic nerve branches into which two nerves? | common peroneal nerve and the tibial nerve. |
The tibial nerve at the level of the ___ is usually the site of stimulation for somatosensory evoked potential monitoring. | ankle |
Besides the tibial nerve, which other two nerves may also be stimulated for somatosensory evoked potential monitoring? | ulnar or median nerves |
The critical electrode for detecting the evoked potential after stimulation of the tibial nerve must be placed over the primary sensory cortex where on the scalp? | at the midline of the scalp |
If the median nerve or ulnar nerve is stimulated, the critical recording electrodes must be placed over the primary sensory cortex, where on the scalp? | somewhat laterally from the midline |
For sensory evoked potentials, the stimulating electrodes are placed ___ and the detecting electrodes are placed ____. (Peripherally or Centrally) | stimulating- peripherally, detecting- centrally |
List the pathway of action potentials from the right tibial nerve to the sensory cortex. | right tibial nerve to spinal cord via dorsal horn -> right spinal cord (cuneatus and gracilis tracts) -> lef cerebral cortex -> evoked potential recorded from electrodes between ears near midline (over longitudinal fissure) |
After mild electrical stimulation of the nerve occurs, the electrical information reaches the cortex and what occurs? | a fluctuation in potential, an evoked potential |
What does the early component or early peak of the evoked potential result from? | action potentials that are carried via the direct route |
What is the direct route? | action potentials carried to the primary sensory cortex by the cuneatus and gracilis tracts of the dorsal lemniscal system. |
How many neurons compose the dorsal lemniscal system? | 3 neurons |
What does the delayed or late peak result from? | the arrival of action potentials that had traversed the reticular activating system |
Where are electrodes located that receive the late peak? | anywhere on the scalp |
Which peak is larger is magnitude, the early or late peak? | late peak |
___ and ___ are measured in somatosensory evoked potential monitoring. | Latency and amplitude |
What is latency? | the time it takes for the action potential to traverse the peripheral nerves, spinal cord, and inner brain structures before arriving at the cerebral cortex |
What is amplitude? | the magnitude or size of the evoked potential |
What is somatosensory monitoring used to detect? | dorsal spinal cord and brain ischemia |
The waves that deflect downward are designated ____ and those that deflect upward ___. | downward- P: positive; upward N: negative |
The latency in milliseconds is indicated by the numbers placed where? | after the P or N |
An (increase/decrease) in amplitude during evoked potential monitoring suggests that damage is occurring in the neural pathway being monitored. | decrease |
An (increase/decrease) in latency during evoked potential monitoring suggests that damage is occurring in the neural pathway being monitored. | increase |
Which nerves are stimulated during spinal scoliosis surgery? | tibial |
What does increased latency and decreased amplitude of the SSEP with spinal scoliosis surgery indicate? | ischemia of the posterior spinal cord |
In thoracic and thoracolumbar aortic reconstruction, ____ is one major concern. | spinal cord ischemia |
During thoracolumbar aortic reconstruction, because ischemia of distal nerves, including posterior tibial nerves, alters conduction and the SSEP, spinal stimulation via a __ ___ electrode may be used. | lumbar epidural |
Increased latency or decreased amplitude during thoracolumbar surgery indicates what? | ischemia of the posterior cord |
The incidence of paraplegia following repair of thoracic or thoracolumbar aortic aneurysms varies from __-__%. | 5-40% |
Since SSEP monitoring assesses the integrity of the __ cord only, monitoring of the __ cord is useful. (Anterior/posterior) | posterior, anterior |
__ ___ potentials are used to monitor iscemia of the anterior (ventral) columns. | motor evoked |
What is the most commonly used technique for motor evoked potentials? Stimulation over the __ __ or ___ __ with sensing over the ___ ___. | motor cortex or cervical spine; popliteal nerve |
The motor cortex or cervical spine is ____ and popliteal nerve is ___. (central/peripheral) | central, peripheral |
In a carotid endardarterectomy, which nerves are stimulated? | median nerves |
What do increased latency and decreased amplitude indicated during SSEP of a carotid endarterectomy? | ischemia of deep brain structures and the sensory cortex |
Why is the usefulness of somatosensory evoked potential monitoring during carotid endarterectomy questionable? | poor outcome changes in SSEP have been noted |
Somatosensory evoked potentials can be modified by changes in what parameters? | temperature, systemic blood pressure, paCO2, PaO2 |
SSEP are elicited by repetitive stimulation of what 3 nerves? | tibial, median, or ulnar nerves |
SSEP is useful for monitoring function of ___ or __ during surgery. | dorsal spinal cord or brain |
What surgeries is SSEP useful for monitoring? | spinal cord surgery, endarterectomy, aortic surgery, or during repair of intracranial aneurysms |
Brainstem Auditory Evoked Potentials are elicited by __ ___. | auditory clicks |
BAEP re useful during operations involving CN ___. | CN VIII |
Visual evoked potentials are elicited by what? | flashes of light |
When are visual evoked potentials useful? | if surgery is near the optic nerve |
Give an example of a surgery that may use visual evoked potentials. | trans-sphenoidal approach to anterior pituitary tumor |
Visual evoked potentials monitor the integrity of the __ nerve, CN __. | optic nerve, CN II |
GEneral intravenous anesthetics and volatile inhaltional agents have what effect on evoked potentials? | increase the latency and decrease the amplitude |
Rank visual, SSEP, and BAEP and their sensitivity to anesthetics. | VEP most, SSEP intermediate, BAEP least |
How do you remember which is most sensitive? a | VEP: V for Very sensitive; SSEP: S for somewhat sensitive; BAEP: B for Barely sensitive |
Somatosensory evoked potentials are recorded from electrodes placed over the ___ ___ if the tibial nerve is stimulated bilaterally. | longitudinal sulcus |
If during a Harrington Rod procedure the amplitude of the SSEP decreases the latency increases, damage to what region of the spinal cord (anterior, posterior, lateral) may have occurred? | The posterior cord may have incurred damage |
Created by:
valleyanesthesia
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