2017
DOI: 10.4097/kjae.2017.70.2.127
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Intraoperative monitoring of flash visual evoked potential under general anesthesia

Abstract: In neurosurgical procedures that may cause visual impairment in the intraoperative period, the monitoring of flash visual evoked potential (VEP) is clinically used to evaluate visual function. Patients are unconscious during surgery under general anesthesia, making flash VEP monitoring useful as it can objectively evaluate visual function. The flash stimulus input to the retina is transmitted to the optic nerve, optic chiasm, optic tract, lateral geniculate body, optic radiation (geniculocalcarine tract), and … Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(44 reference statements)
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“…VEP stability and reproducibility are also affected by non-patient factors and particularly important techniques to augment this are the use of total intra-venous anaesthetic (TIVA), the use of LED goggles or silicone discs for light stimulus delivery, a black shield patch placed over the eyes and braided electrode cables, [ 20 ] and the use of simultaneous electroretinography (ERG) monitoring [ 12 ]. One or more of these techniques were employed in all studies (Table 4 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…VEP stability and reproducibility are also affected by non-patient factors and particularly important techniques to augment this are the use of total intra-venous anaesthetic (TIVA), the use of LED goggles or silicone discs for light stimulus delivery, a black shield patch placed over the eyes and braided electrode cables, [ 20 ] and the use of simultaneous electroretinography (ERG) monitoring [ 12 ]. One or more of these techniques were employed in all studies (Table 4 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, given that all studies involved the surgeon temporarily halting surgical manipulation at the point of a VEP amplitude decrease there is an underlying assumption that all teams believed that this may indeed be a contemporaneous warning sign of optic injury. Prolonged latency has also been used as an indicator to the optic apparatus; however, latency is felt to be a parameter that is more difficult to reliably monitor with flash VEP [ 12 ] and reported to be difficult to evaluate in the presence of decreased amplitude [ 6 , 11 , 12 ]. Latency was monitored in six of the studies in this review, but no statistically significant conclusions were drawn from these.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The distance to the monitor was 100 cm. The patients were [17][18][19]. The impedance between the recording and the ground electrode was less than 5 kX.…”
Section: Measurements Of Pvepsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anna Teresa Mazzeo 1 , Deepak Kumar Gupta 2 The main goal of modern neurosurgery is removal of the lesion with preservation of neurological function. In order to reach this objective, intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IONM) has been introduced and evaluated with the aim to make the neurosurgeon aware of ongoing changes in neural function, allowing prompt corrective intervention to prevent postoperative deficits.…”
Section: Intraoperative Visual Evoked Potential Monitoring For a Safer Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Surgerymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Intraoperative VEP is affected by various factors, viz, temperature (hypothermia attenuates VEP amplitude and latency gets extended, and waveforms disappear at 25-27 degree C), partial pressure of carbon dioxide in blood [hypocapnia causes changes in pH resulting in acceleration of conduction velocity of somatosensory evoked potential], hypoxia and hypotension (VEP amplitude is decreased and latency is extended), hematocrit values <15%, during turning of skin flap on forehead (may dislodge the LED stimulating electrode) and anesthetic agents. [2,3] In some cases, VEPs change not as a result of damage to the optic pathway or ischemia but due to the anesthetics. As anesthetic agents suppress synaptic transmission, reactions from polysynaptic pathways (e.g., cortical recordings) are affected by anesthesia to a much greater extent than those recorded from oligosynaptic pathways.…”
Section: In Addition To Veps Electroretinograms (Ergs)mentioning
confidence: 99%