1. Introduction
Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM) has become the gold standard for spinal cord monitoring during spinal surgery [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5]. Transcranial electrical stimulation motor-evoked potentials (Tc-MEPs) are used to monitor the motor pathways [
5], and somatosensory-evoked potentials (SSEPs) are used to monitor the sensory pathways [
6]. Tc-MEPs can be recorded directly in the epi- or subdural space over the spinal cord using direct-waves (D-waves) or from the muscles (mTc-MEPs).
mTc-MEPs can be recorded using either extramuscular (surface or subcutaneous needle) or intramuscular (needle or hookwire) electrodes [
5,
7,
8]. When mTc-MEPs are recorded with extramuscular electrodes, volume conduction significantly affects the recorded potentials by influencing the waveform morphology, decreasing the measured amplitudes, and changing the frequency content of the signals [
9,
10].
Electromyography (EMG) and intraoperative motor root studies have shown that spontaneous discharges, e.g., myotonic discharges, fibrillations, and positives spikes, cannot be adequately registered using surface electrodes [
11,
12]. Moreover, Skinner et al. concluded that EMG monitoring during myelopathy surgery should not be performed using surface electrodes [
12]. It was stated that intramuscular electrodes are preferred for lower motor neuron function monitoring, since near field recordings are required. However, which recording electrodes are preferred for upper motor neuron function monitoring, i.e., spinal cord monitoring, has not been vigorously investigated yet.
Different mTc-MEP characteristics are considered of importance during spinal cord monitoring. These include mTc-MEP elicitability, motor threshold, amplitude, area under the curve (AUC), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and the variability of mTc-MEP amplitudes over time [
5]. Two studies have compared mTc-MEP amplitudes of signals recorded using intramuscular versus extramuscular electrodes [
12,
13]. Both found that higher amplitudes were recorded with intramuscular electrodes. To the best of our knowledge, no human studies have examined the effects of two different extramuscular mTc-MEP recording methods, i.e., the use of surface and subcutaneous needle recording electrodes, on mTc-MEP characteristics.
When supramaximal stimulation is applied, an mTc-MEP amplitude reduction of ≥50–80% is most often used as a warning criterion of impending neurological damage during spinal cord monitoring [
5]. The polysynaptic, nonlinear, and unstable properties of mTc-MEP monitoring signals are associated with a higher incidence of false warnings [
14]. To avoid excessive numbers of false warnings, it is important that the variability of the mTc-MEP signals is as small as possible. The difference in variability between successively recorded mTc-MEP amplitudes is unknown for different mTc-MEP recording electrodes in humans.
Therefore, the aim of this study was to compare mTc-MEP characteristics, including elicitability, motor thresholds, amplitudes, AUC, SNR, and the variability of mTc-MEP amplitudes, between surface and subcutaneous needle electrode recordings, during mTc-MEP spinal cord monitoring of the tibialis anterior (TA) muscles.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
This is a prospective observational study. Since the data were collected during routine clinical care, the hospital ethical committee waived the requirement for full ethical committee review following the terms of the Dutch Act on Medical Research on Human Subjects (Wet Medisch-Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, or ‘WMO’). The study was, however, registered and approved by a non-WMO study evaluation committee who deemed informed consent unnecessary.
2.2. Patients
Consecutive patients of 12 years and older who underwent surgery with mTc-MEP spinal cord monitoring were included. Subcutaneous needle and surface recording electrodes were placed on the TA muscles in all patients. Patients in whom warning criteria were reached were excluded from this study. A warning was defined as a reproducible significant deterioration or complete loss of mTc-MEP amplitude of the TA left and/or right muscles. The warning criteria depended on the type of surgery and were either ≥50% or ≥80% deterioration of mTc-MEP amplitude [
14]. Measurements from muscles that were not elicitable and subjects who had fewer than 10 mTc-MEP measurements were also excluded. Muscles where the mTc-MEPs could not be elicited consistently, i.e., where the mTc-MEPs could be elicited one time and not the next, were only included for the elicitability analysis.
2.3. Anesthesia
Anesthetic management was at the discretion of the responsible anesthesiologist and in keeping with the departmental protocols. In brief, anesthesia was achieved and maintained with infusions of propofol with either remifentanil or sufentanil [
15]. Propofol administration was titrated to achieve a bispectral index (Medtronic, Ireland) of 40–60 (representing adequate but not excessive depth of anesthesia). Muscle relaxants were given prior to tracheal intubation but not thereafter to avoid negative effects on mTc-MEPs. During surgery, esketamine was used as an analgesic at the discretion of the anesthesiologist in 101 patients (54.59%). The responsible anesthesiology teams attempted to maintain arterial blood pressure within 30% of baseline, and the core temperature, oxygen, and carbon dioxide partial pressures within normal range during surgery. Inhalational anesthetics were not used.
2.4. Muscle-Recorded Transcranial Electrical Stimulation Motor Evoked Potentials
2.4.1. Stimulation Parameters
Intraoperative mTc-MEPs were evoked using a constant voltage stimulator (NIM-Eclipse E4 IONM system, Medtronic BV, Eindhoven, The Netherlands). Transcranial electrical stimuli were administered with corkscrew electrodes montaged at stimulation location Cpl1–Cpl2 (1 cm posterior, 1 cm lateral) altered from the international 10–20 EEG-system [
16]. Stimulation was performed using a train of 5 pulses and a pulse duration of 75 µs. Four patients were monitored with a pulse duration of 0.5 ms and 2 patients were monitored with >5 pulses per train. For each patient, mTc-MEPs were measured using different interstimulus intervals (ISI) of 1 ms, 1.25 ms, 1.5 ms, 2 ms, 3 ms, and 4 ms to determine the optimal setting for baseline. The ISI that provided the highest amplitudes was selected for monitoring during the surgical procedure. A high-pass filter of 30 Hz and a low-pass filter of 1500 Hz were applied.
2.4.2. Recording Method
mTc-MEPs were recorded using subcutaneous needle and surface electrodes at the left and right TA muscle, as shown in
Figure 1. A bipolar montage and true differential amplification were applied to surface and needle recordings. The skin underneath the surface electrodes was scrubbed briefly prior to the electrode placement.
The following recording electrodes were used during the study:
Subcutaneous needle electrode: 13 mm length × 0.40 mm width (27 G), noncoated, straight, (Medtronic, Xomed, Jacksonville, FL, USA);
Surface electrode: 20 × 27 mm, adhesive surface pad electrodes (Medtronic, Xomed, Jacksonville, FL, USA).
One surface electrode was placed at the junction of the upper one-third and lower two-thirds of the line between the tibial tuberosity and the tip of the lateral malleolus. The second surface electrode was placed over the lateral aspect of the tibia 4 cm distal to the first recording electrode (muscle belly–tendon preparation). The subcutaneous needle electrodes were inserted into the skin directly under the surface electrodes at an angle of 45 degrees, after which tape was placed over the surface and subcutaneous needle electrodes to avoid detachment.
2.4.3. Elicitability
Both TA muscles in all patients were checked for elicitability. For all muscles with inconsistently elicitable mTc-MEP responses, the number of responses and non-responses for both recording methods were calculated. For the other mTc-MEP characteristics investigated in this study (motor threshold, amplitude, AUC, SNR, and variability), the TA muscles with inconsistently elicitable mTc-MEP responses were excluded from the analysis.
2.4.4. Motor Threshold
Motor thresholds were determined at the beginning and the end of the surgery. The motor threshold was determined by increasing stimulation voltage in predefined steps of 10–20 V. The motor threshold was defined as the lowest voltage that generated a reproducible mTc-MEP amplitude at a display gain of 50 µV.
2.4.5. Amplitude and Area under the Curve
After baseline measurements had been completed, the first mTc-MEP measurement that was performed after positioning of the patient but before incision was collected for the left and right TA muscle. The mTc-MEP amplitudes and AUCs recorded by the subcutaneous needle and surface electrode electrodes were compared.
To analyze the difference between the beginning and end amplitudes, the mean of the first 3 amplitudes was divided by the mean of the last 3 amplitudes per patient, type, and side.
2.4.6. Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR)
Signal-to-noise ratios were calculated for the first 50 included patients. Each mTc-MEP amplitude was divided by the largest noise amplitude. The noise amplitude was calculated from the last part of the signal (
Figure 2). Differences in geometric mean SNR were compared for surface and subcutaneous needle mTc-MEP recordings.
2.4.7. Variability
To assess the variability between mTc-MEP amplitudes for both surface and subcutaneous needle recording electrodes, all consecutive, simultaneous amplitudes during surgery were collected. Previous results have shown that needle electrodes on average record larger mTc-MEP amplitudes than surface electrodes; the mean consecutive difference (MCD) is not considered a useful measure of variability since the absolute difference would be larger for the needle electrode [
17]. Therefore, consecutive ratios of the amplitudes were calculated per patient, per side, and per electrode type, and a geometric mean of these consecutive ratios (MCR) was calculated for each subgroup (patient, side, type) using Formula (1).
In this formula, m1, m2, etc. are the individual amplitudes and n is the number of measurements.
2.5. Data Collection
mTc-MEP curves were exported from the NIM-Eclipse E4 IONM system (Medtronic BV, The Netherlands) after which the mTc-MEP amplitudes, AUCs, and noise amplitudes were calculated and collected using software routines written in Python (version 3.7.1.). The consecutive mTc-MEP amplitudes were plotted per patient, per muscle and per type of recording electrode for visual inspection to objectify the elicitability. Repetitive mTc-MEP measurements (every 10 s) and artifacts were excluded from the analysis of the SNR and MCR. Motor thresholds were collected from the neurophysiologist IONM reports for each patient, electrode type, and TA muscle.
2.6. Statistical Analysis
All analysis were performed in R software version 4.0.5 (the R foundation for statistical computing). The mTc-MEP parameters, including elicitability, motor threshold, amplitude, AUC, amplitude difference, SNR, and the variability between mTc-MEP amplitudes were compared between surface and subcutaneous needle recordings. Descriptive statistics and patient-wise histograms were used to identify potentially influential values and outliers. Normally distributed variables were summarized as mean and SD, while non-normally distributed variables were summarized as median and interquartile range (IQR).
The interclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was calculated to identify the agreement of the percentage of not-elicitable responses between surface and subcutaneous needle recording electrodes (icc function in R version 4.0.5). The ICC calculation was based on the responses of all the included TA muscles (n = 364).
For all other outcomes, the best-fit linear regression model was identified by testing whether the type of electrode (subcutaneous needle vs. surface), side (left vs. right), and their interaction significantly improved model fit (p < 0.05) using sequential likelihood ratio tests (Anova function in R, version 4.0.5). Surgery time was an additional variable that was tested for model fit improvement of the mTc-MEP amplitude difference and variability. Model diagnostics were performed on the best-fit model. Sensitivity analyses were performed to verify the robustness of the results to potentially influential values and outliers by refitting the models without those values. After generating the linear regression models, the residuals were plotted to see if they were normally distributed. If they were not normally distributed, the variable was log-transformed using the natural logarithm.
4. Discussion
In this study, we compared the characteristics of mTc-MEPs recorded from the TA muscles with surface and subcutaneous needle recording electrodes during spinal cord monitoring. Although amplitudes and AUC were significantly higher when recording mTc-MEPs with subcutaneous needle electrodes compared to surface recordings, in all other aspects, the surface electrode recordings were equivalent. There was an almost perfect agreement in elicitability rating between the surface and the subcutaneous needle electrode mTc-MEPs. Furthermore, the motor thresholds were similar for surface and subcutaneous needle recording electrodes. Although the SNR was significantly higher with subcutaneous electrodes, in all recordings, the SNR was sufficiently high, making it possible to distinguish signals from noise for both recording electrode types. Lastly, the variability between mTc-MEP amplitudes is similar for both recording electrodes.
Individual factors such as sweat content and subcutaneous fat content influence the volume conduction of the measured surface signal. The interaction of volume conduction with the basic source characteristics can only be evaluated using biophysical modeling [
18]. The extra impedance of the skin and subcutaneous tissue, which must be overcome when recording with surface electrodes, might influence the volume conduction. However, the volume conduction for both recording methods does not seem to influence the ability to record an mTc-MEP, since thresholds necessary to elicit an mTc-MEP of the TA muscle were similar when recording with either surface or subcutaneous needle recording electrodes. Furthermore, the ability to detect mTc-MEPs in muscles that showed inconsistently elicitable mTc-MEP responses was similar for both recording methods.
The amplitudes were significantly higher when recording mTc-MEPs with subcutaneous needle electrodes compared to amplitudes recorded with surface electrodes. This corresponds with the intra-operative findings of other studies [
13,
19]. Gonzalez et al. showed that recordings from intramuscular electrodes have significantly higher amplitudes than subcutaneous electrodes [
13]. Journee et al. found higher amplitudes with subcutaneous electrodes compared to surface electrodes in horses [
19]. The AUC was also significantly higher with subcutaneous needle recordings compared to surface mTc-MEP recordings.
The amplitude differences were not significantly different between the subcutaneous needle and surface recordings. In addition, the amplitude differences were not significantly influenced by the total surgery time. Therefore, the time of surgery seems to affect mTc-MEPs recorded with both electrode types equally.
When mTc-MEP monitoring is performed, the reproducibility of the recordings is of great clinical importance. Therefore, the variability between mTc-MEP amplitudes should be as low as possible [
5]. Not only will this decrease the number of false-positive warnings, but a consistently lower variability might also lead to stricter and more precise warning criteria [
14,
20]. Since there are significant differences in height of the amplitudes between the recordings of the two different electrode types, the coefficient of variation (calculated from mean and SD) and MCD (calculated from absolute amplitudes) were not suitable measures of variability [
17]. Therefore, in this study, we used the MCR as a measure of variability. The mean variability was similar for surface and subcutaneous needle electrodes and below 0.25 in most patients. This is considered an acceptable variability for mTc-MEP monitoring, since in our study, ≥50% or ≥80% amplitude reduction criteria were used. The total surgery time did have an effect on variability of the mTc-MEPs. A possible explanation is the likelihood of more variation in anesthetic and surgical influences (such as blood pressure, body temperature and anesthetic infusion rates), with increasing time. The effect of 0.0053 increase in MCR per hour is small, and further research is needed to validate the clinical relevance.
One could argue that impedances are usually higher for surface electrodes than for subcutaneous needle electrodes. However, this study showed sufficient SNRs for mTcMEPs measured with both recording electrodes.
An advantage of surface recording electrodes is that they are non-invasive, and thus, there is no risk of infection, hemorrhage, damage to surrounding tissue, or needle-stick injury [
21,
22,
23]. In the hands of experienced IONM personnel, the placement of surface electrodes is as time-consuming as subcutaneous needle electrode placement.
As discussed in the introduction, surface electrodes are considered inferior to intramuscular electrodes for identifying spontaneous discharges in lower motor neurons [
12,
13]. However, during spinal cord monitoring, surface electrodes are a good alternative when motor root monitoring is not required. We have investigated whether surface electrodes are non-inferior to subcutaneous needle electrodes for the detection of motor warnings in the NERFACE study part II.
Limitations
Although this is one of the most extensive human studies comparing surface with subcutaneous needle electrodes for intraoperative mTc-MEP monitoring, only one surface electrode and subcutaneous needle electrode size was used. No human studies were found that investigated the effects of electrode size during mTc-MEP monitoring. Larger surface electrodes can obtain signals from a larger part of the muscle and could therefore have an influence on the variability of the signal. Van Dijk et al. studied the effect of electrode size on compound muscle action potential (CMAP) variability in 20 healthy subjects and found that the area of the surface recording electrode was inversely related to the variability of the CMAP amplitudes [
24]. Therefore, mTc-MEP characteristics, especially the variability, obtained from other electrode sizes could be different from the results presented in this study.
Furthermore, we did not objectively determine if the subcutaneously placed needle electrodes were indeed placed subcutaneously instead of intramuscularly (e.g., in underweight patients with little subcutaneous fat). Inadvertent intramuscular placement could have had effects on volume conduction. Although intramuscular recording needles acquire signals from fewer muscle fibers than subcutaneous recording needles, Skinner et al. showed that intramuscular recordings are superior in monitoring the peripheral motor neuron [
12]. This can be explained by spontaneous muscle fiber activity which can be better detected using intramuscular recording electrodes [
12,
13]. However, if the needle electrodes were indeed placed intramuscularly in some cases, it would only enforce our conclusion that volume conduction does not greatly influence the motor threshold measurements for mTc-MEPs. Moreover, waveform analysis was not performed, so no conclusions regarding the similarity of the waveform characteristics other than AUC can be made. Other aspects of the waveform, such as polyphasia and length of the signal, could be influential to the visual interpretation of the recorded mTc-MEPs. This could be relevant since, in theory, polyphasia could be reduced by the pathological loss of motor units [
5]. Lastly, this study evaluated the quality of mTc-MEP responses with recording electrodes on the TA muscle. For application of these results in mTc-MEP monitoring of other muscles, one should consider that the TA muscle is a relatively superficial muscle. Therefore, dissimilar results could be found in the surface recordings of deeper muscles.