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Published in: Journal of Clinical Monitoring and Computing 1/2021

01-02-2021 | Motor Evoked Potential | Original Research

Low-dose droperidol suppresses transcranial electrical motor-evoked potential amplitude: a retrospective study

Authors: Hiroyuki Deguchi, Kenta Furutani, Yusuke Mitsuma, Yoshinori Kamiya, Hiroshi Baba

Published in: Journal of Clinical Monitoring and Computing | Issue 1/2021

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Abstract

Low-dose droperidol has been widely used as an antiemetic during and after surgery. Although high-dose droperidol affects motor-evoked potential, the effects of low-dose droperidol on motor-evoked potential amplitude are unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate whether low-dose droperidol affects motor-evoked potential amplitude. We retrospectively reviewed the data of patients who underwent spine surgery under general anesthesia with motor-evoked potential monitoring from February 2016 to 2017. The outcome was the motor-evoked potential amplitude of the bilateral abductor pollicis brevis muscle, tibialis anterior muscle, and abductor hallucis muscle within 1 and 1–2 h after droperidol administration, compared with the baseline motor-evoked potential value. Thirty-four patients were analyzed. The median dose of droperidol was 21 µg/kg. The motor-evoked potential amplitudes of all muscles were significantly reduced after droperidol administration and recovered to baseline values within 2 h. The reduction of all motor-evoked potential amplitudes after droperidol administration was 37–45% of baseline values. There were no significant differences in other drugs administered. There were no serious adverse effects of droperidol administration. Motor-evoked potential amplitude was suppressed by low-dose droperidol. During intraoperative motor-evoked potential monitoring in spine surgery, anesthesiologists should pay careful attention to the timing of administration of droperidol, even at low doses. Based on the results of this study, we are conducting a randomized controlled trial.
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Metadata
Title
Low-dose droperidol suppresses transcranial electrical motor-evoked potential amplitude: a retrospective study
Authors
Hiroyuki Deguchi
Kenta Furutani
Yusuke Mitsuma
Yoshinori Kamiya
Hiroshi Baba
Publication date
01-02-2021
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Journal of Clinical Monitoring and Computing / Issue 1/2021
Print ISSN: 1387-1307
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2614
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10877-020-00464-4

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