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Nerve
Conduction Studies and Electromyography |
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Nerve conduction study (NCS) and electromyography (EMG)
are useful techniques to evaluate the localization and
pathophysiology of sensory and motor dysfunction in
patients seen by neurosurgeons. These techniques are an
extension of the clinical history and physical
examination and must be designed and interpreted
concurrent with that information. The tests are subject
to technical error, so familiarity with the quality of
the study performed in the EMG laboratory is crucial to
the clinician's confidence in the results. When the
referring neurosurgeon requests the study to answer a
specific clinical question or queries whether
electrophysiologic techniques could be helpful in the
assessment of his or her patient, direct communication
with the electromyographer is useful.
When
patients with hepatitis, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or
HIV-related disease are scheduled for EMG, the laboratory should
be notified for their protection and handling of equipment.
Other clinical information, including pacemaker use, central
line placement, neutropenia, and coagulation status, may also
influence the way the study is performed and should be
communicated.
Children
can be evaluated by NCS/EMG. Young children are usually sedated
for the NCS and awake but drowsy for the EMG. These studies may
be helpful in evaluating floppy infants and children with
traumatic brachial plexopathy or other neuromuscular complaints.
Here is
a basic introduction to how NCS and EMG are performed as well as
how the data can be useful to the neurosurgeon. Suggested
criteria for the design of appropriate NCS/EMG studies for a
given clinical situation have been published but need to be
individualized based on the patient's history and physical
findings.
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Principles of
Nerve Conduction Studies |
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Orthodromic conduction sends impulses in the same
direction as physiological conduction. i.e., toward the
spinal cord for sensory conduction and to muscle for
motor conduction. Antidromic conduction is in the
reverse direction.
Sensory
complaints can be evaluated by a sensory NCS. A supramaximal
stimulus is delivered to a sensory nerve and the orthodromic
response is recorded, often by a surface electrode placed over
the course of the nerve at a fixed distance from the stimulation
site (Fig-1A).
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Fig-1: A.
Depiction of a median sensory nerve conduction
study. Thin arrow- recording electrode. Arrow
head- reference electrode. Open arrow- ground. wide
arrow- stimulator. B- Sensory nerve action potential
-SNAP. |
Fig-2: A- Depiction of a median motor NCS. B-
Compound motor action potential (CMAP). |
The speed
of conduction of both sensory and motor fibers is determined by
the integrity of heavily myelinated fibers and the preservation
of saltatory conduction between individual nodes of Ranvier. If
the myelin is disrupted between the stimulus and recording
sites, the recorded potential will be delayed in onset. This
measurement is called the distal latencv and in sensory
conductions is the time from the stimulus onset to the peak of
the sensory nerve action potential (SNAP) (Fig-1B).
Conduction velocity in sensory nerves is calculated by dividing
the measured distance between the stimulation and recording
sites by the distal latency. With a supramaximal stimulus, all
of the axons beneath the stimulator should depolarize,
resulting in a waveform amplitude commensurate with the number
of underlying axons depolarized. The amplitude is measured from
the peak to the trough of the SNAP (Fig-1B).
Each EMG laboratory should
have normal values with controls for patient age and height.
Skin temperature should be controlled, which may require warming
the limb. These factors can significantly affect the results of
the conduction studies. Technical errors such as not placing
the recording electrode directly over the nerve being tested or
not achieving supramaximal stimulation of the nerve can
artificially lower the amplitude of the SNAP. Factors such as
inaccurate distance measurements or a cold limb can markedly
alter distal latency and conduction velocity determinations.
Motor NCSs
can aid in the assessment of the etiology of weakness. A
recording surface electrode is placed over the belly of the
muscle being studied (Fig-2A). Through orthodromic, supramaximal
stimulation of the motor nerve at a fixed distance, a waveform
called the compound motor action potential (CMAP) is obtained
(Fig-2B).
This waveform represents the summation of the depolarization of
muscle fibers beneath the recording electrode. This distal
latency is determined by recording the time from the
stimulus onset to the initial motor response. The motor nerve is
then stimulated from a second, more proximal site and a second
CMAP is obtained. The conduction velocity of the nerve segment
between stimulation sites is calculated by dividing the distance
between stimulation sites by the difference between distal
latencies. In motor nerves such as the ulnar or peroneal nerve
that are commonly susceptible to compression about fixed
structures, a third stimulation site is used to span the
possible compression site. The conduction velocity can then be
calculated from each of the two proximal sites and compared.
Focal slowing of more than 10 m/s in a short segment is
considered significant.
With
supramaximal stimulation of the motor nerve, all motor fibers
beneath the stimulus are depolarized, resulting in a maximal
contraction of the muscle being recorded. The amplitude of the
CMAP is thus dependent on the state of the motor axons.
Amplitude is measured from the baseline to the peak of the CMAP.
However,
other processes besides axonal failure can result in a low CMAP
amplitude. If muscle mass is decreased from any cause such as a
previous central nervous system injury or malnutrition, the CMAP
amplitude can be lowered. Also, severe myopathy or neuromuscular
junction disease can result in a low CMAP amplitude. EMG is
thus needed to clarify the cause of the low CMAP amplitude. The
area of the CMAP correlates with the amplitude and may better
reflect the amount of muscle being depolarized.
Evaluating
the amplitude and degree of dispersion of the CMAP can greatly
assist in understanding the underlying pathophysiology of the
nerve lesion. Neurapraxia refers to nerve conduction failure
without axonal loss and implies a demyelinating lesion. If
enough fibers fail to conduct impulses because of conduction
block across a given segment, the CMAP amplitude will decrease
during nerve stimulation proximal to the block; 25 to 30 percent
is a significant degree of change in most nerves. Focal slowing
affecting fast conducting fibers will delay the CMAP. If there
is differential slowing of slow conducting fibers along a nerve
segment, the CMAP waveform will be dispersed, thus
demonstrating a desynchronization of fiber firing.
Motor NCSs
are difficult technically and errors may result from improper
placement of electrodes, incorrect measurements, or submaximal
stimulation. Once again, height, age, and skin temperature are
important.
Another
parameter that can be measured to evaluate conduction along a
motor nerve is the F-wave, one type of late response. This
response is obtained with supramaximal stimulation while motor
conduction studies are being performed. When a nerve is
stimulated there is depolarization of that nerve in both
directions. The F-wave response is caused by recurrent firing of
the anterior horn cell after antidromic conduction. Therefore
both the afferent and efferent limbs of this response are motor.
Because this response evaluates proximal nerve conduction, it
can be useful in evaluating patients for root or plexus injury.
It may be especially useful in the acute stage before evidence
of peripheral nerve degeneration and denervation changes (as
detected by EMG) has developed. Because of the length of nerve
traveled by the impulses, normal values are different based on
the subject's height. F-wave latencies are determined by
analyzing at least 10 F-waves and recording the earliest
latency.
Another
type of late response, the
H-reflex,
is different from the F-wave in that the afferent
limb of the H-reflex is sensory and the efferent limb is motor.
The H-reflex is tested by stimulating the tibial nerve in the
popliteal fossa and recording from the gastrocnemius muscle.
The H-reflex afferent limb is through the S1 root. Responses
are determined with submaximal stimulation and are compared to
the responses on the contralateral side. An
asymmetry of 2 ms is considered significant.
Normal
patients may have bilaterally absent H-reflexes so that
bilateral absence of response is not necessarily pathologic.
Both F-wave latency and H-reflexes are most useful when
peripheral conduction studies are normal; abnormal responses
suggest a proximal lesion. However, when routine motor
conduction is abnormal, abnormality of these late responses may
not necessarily be indicative of a proximal lesion. After nerve
injury, such as with a remote history of a radiculopathy, late
responses may remain abnormal indefinitely. Therefore the
interpretation of an abnormality would benefit from comparison
with a previous study.
To
summarize, distal latency and conduction velocity measurements
are particularly helpful in evaluating the speed of conduction
along distal and mid-portions of a peripheral nerve,
respectively. The F-wave latency is particularly useful in
evaluating conduction along proximal segments of a motor nerve
if the distal segments are normal. When the electromyographer
uses the term demyelinating features. reference is made to
prolonged distal latency, slow conduction velocity, prolonged
F-wave latency, or dispersed waveforms. The amplitude of the CMAP is altered by failure of conduction to the muscle and the
waveform may be helpful in understanding the reason for the
altered conduction. Axonal features usually imply low
amplitudes. However, an EMG study of the muscle is needed to
clarify the reasons for a low CMAP amplitude.
Both
sensory and motor conduction studies are highly reproducible,
although there is better intra-examiner reliability than
inter-examiner reliability. Conduction studies are focused on
an area of clinical abnormality; distant areas are studied also,
to classify the abnormality as focal, multifocal, or diffuse.
In studies in which a focal conduction block is suspected but
not definitely proven by the routine studies, a technique called
inching can be used. The region of the suspected block is
studied by nerve stimulation above and below the presumed site
of the block at 1-cm intervals searching for a focal dramatic
change in distal latency. These studies are frequently useful in
the evaluation of a suspected carpal tunnel syndrome, ulnar
neuropathy at the elbow, and peroneal neuropathy at the knee.
Motor
conduction studies can also be used to evaluate patients with
neuromuscular junction disorders. This is accomplished through
repetitive nerve stimulation of the muscle. Patients with
significant primary or secondary neuromuscular junction disease
have a diminished safety factor of neuromuscular junction
transmission. Ordinarily, an excess of acetylcholine packets
and receptors are present, which ensures successful
neuromuscular junction transmission. However, in patients with
neuromuscular junction disorders this safety factor is
diminished and repetitive stimulation, usually at 1 to 3 Hz,
causes failure of neuromuscular junction transmission, resulting
in a decremental response in CMAP amplitude or area. Standard
guidelines include comparing the response produced by the first
stimulus to the response produced by the fourth stimulus; an
abnormality is defined as a decrement of at least 10 percent
(Fig-3). Decrements on repetitive stimulation are not
specific for primary neuromuscular junction disease and can be
seen in any circumstance in which neuromuscular junction
transmission is faulty. Such circumstances include motor neuron
disease and patients receiving drugs that are active at the
neuromuscular junction. The sensitivity of repetitive nerve
stimulation is higher when a clinically weak muscle is being
tested. A normal test in a clinically normal muscle does not
rule out the presence of neuromuscular junction disease, and
additional muscles should be studied to increase the yield.
Commonly studied muscles include the abductor pollicis brevis,
abductor digiti quinti, extensor digitorum brevis, trapezius,
and facial muscles. |
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Fig-3: A repetitive nerve
stimulation study demonstrating a 61 percent
decrement in area and a 54 percent decrement
in amplitude from the first to the fourth
stimulation. |
Blink
responses, like the corneal reflex, allow evaluation of
trigeminal sensory and facial motor conduction. Surface
electrodes are placed on the orbicularis oculi muscles
bilaterally, along with surface reference electrodes and a
ground. Stimulation of the supraorbital nerve or a glabellar tap
results in an ipsilateral response via a pontine pathway
through the main sensory trigeminal nucleus and the facial
nucleus. The response is designated R1. Thus, this R1 response
evaluates trigeminal and facial nerve conduction. Subsequent to
the R1 response is a second bilateral response, designated R2,
that is polysynaptic and more diffuse in brain stem
localization. The RI response is best used for evaluating
conduction velocity along the trigeminal and facial nerves
because it is a shorter reflex. The R2 response is best used in
localizing the lesion to right or left trigeminal or facial
nerves. These studies along with routine motor conduction
studies of the facial nerve and EMG of the facial muscles may be
useful in analyzing several disorders affecting the facial and
trigeminal nerves.
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Principles of
Electromyography |
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Electromyography is an important procedure in the evaluation of
lower motor neuron dysfunction. A needle electrode is placed
into the muscle being studied and potentials are evaluated
visually on an
oscilloscope and audibly. Several different types of needle
electrodes can be used and each has particular recording
characteristics. Contraindications to this procedure include
active cutaneous infection at the site of insertion and absolute
neutropenia. Patients with a coagulopathy should be examined
with caution.
Normal
muscle is silent at rest. The first parameter evaluated during
the EMG is called insertional activity. Normal insertional
activity occurs during movement of the needle in the muscle
secondary to the mechanical discharge of muscle fibers. It is
diminished when the muscle is fibrotic or edematous and
increased when fibers are hyperirritable as in an inflammatory
myopathy or denervated muscle. Each muscle tested is usually
examined in four quadrants with five needle movements in each
quadrant.
After the
needle is moved it is left at rest and spontaneous activity is
evaluated. Spontaneous firing of individual muscle fibers
occurs when the fibers are functionally denervated. This can be
due to a neurogenic process, myopathy or severe neuromuscular
junction disorder. The spontaneous activity is seen as
fibrillations or positive sharp waves. A fibrillation is the
action potential from a single muscle fiber and is usually a
very short, biphasic potential of low amplitude. Positive sharp
waves are recorded from a single muscle fiber and are small
downward deflections on the oscilloscope. The relative amount of
spontaneous activity seen can be scored on a 1 to 4 system
(Table -1). After acute denervation with axonal injury,
spontaneous activity can be delayed in appearance for 10 to 14
days. The closer the site of denervation to the muscle examined,
the earlier denervation changes can be seen. An EMG study
immediately after a nerve injury may not show denervation in the
muscles examined even though the muscles are weak.
TABLE-1
Scoring of Spontaneous Activity |
1 |
Increased insertional activity |
2 |
Few areas of spontaneous activity |
3 |
Spontaneous activity in all areas |
4 |
Spontaneous activity filling the screen in all areas |
Fasciculations represent the spontaneous firing of a single
motor unit. A motor unit consists of the anterior horn cell, its
nerve processes, and the neuromuscular junctions and muscle
fibers innervated by that anterior horn cell. Fasciculations
can be seen clinically as well as during EMG. The pathologic
significance of fasciculations is determined by the clinical
and electromyographic findings. If the clinical examination and
the remainder of the EMG are normal, fasciculations are
termed benign. Pathologically, they are seen most frequently
with motor neuron disease but can be seen in other denervating
conditions and rarely myopathic processes.
Myokymic
discharges are the electrical correlate of myokymia seen on
examination and appear as bursts of high-frequency discharges
at regular intervals on the oscilloscope. Facial myokymia is
most often seen in multiple sclerosis or with brain stem
neoplasms. Peripheral root, plexus or nerve injury can also
cause myokymia. The presence of myokymia may be very helpful in
the evaluation of plexopathies in cancer patients because it is
more commonly seen in radiation plexopathy than carcinomatous
plexopathy.
The next portion of the needle examination is the
evaluation of motor unit potentials (MUPs). The needle electrode
records potentials from an area of muscle around the active
electrode site. usually at the tip. Muscle fibers belonging to
the same motor unit fire at approximately the same time and
result in an MUP that can be seen on the screen and evaluated
audibly. The MUP is analyzed by its appearance and firing
pattern. MUPs are quantified by their
amplitude. duration. and complexity (Fig-4). Each muscle has a
range of normal MUPs parameters with which the
electromyographer is familiar. In general, a normal MUP has
four or fewer phases with each phase being a cross and return to
the baseline. If it has more than four phases, the MUP is
called polyphasic or complex. Each change in the direction of a
portion of the MUP is called a turn. The amplitude of the MUP is
measured from peak to trough.
Motor unit
configuration is determined by the number and size of the muscle
fibers belonging to the motor unit. In a neuropathic process. an
axon sprout from a neighboring motor unit may attempt to
reinnervate a denervated fiber. If this is successful the
resultant motor unit will enlarge both in amplitude and
duration. Because more fibers will belong to the motor unit. the
complexity increases. In a myopathic motor unit. muscle fibers
degenerate and the motor unit becomes smaller in amplitude and
duration. If fiber splitting occurs. motor units will become
complex because both fibers are innervated by the same nerve.
Collateral sprouting also occurs in myopathies and can increase
complexity further.
Another
parameter examined during an EMG study is the firing pattern
of the motor units, also called recruitment. During voluntary
contraction of the muscle, the electromyographer recognizes the
size and number of early firing motor units during a
given effort of muscle contraction. Normally, small
MUPs are
recruited first. In neuropathic processes. large MUPs are
recruited early because of dropout of other motor units. Also,
for a given degree of muscular effort, motor units in a neuropathic process will fire more rapidly before other motor
units are recruited into the firing pattern (late recruitment).
In a myopathy. to compensate for less force generated by a small
motor unit. more motor units fire early during muscle
contraction (early recruitment). |
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Fig-4: Motor unit potential
(MUP). |
Another
parameter evaluated during the needle study is the interference
pattern. This represents the amount of MUPs firing during
maximal contraction and can be diminished in any central or
peripheral cause of weakness as well as through patient
noncompliance. Early in motor neuron disease. the interference
pattern is often diminished despite good patient effort. Early
in a myopathy. however, the interference pattern is usually
full. Fig-5 summarizes the EMG findings in normal
subjects and in patients with neurogenic or myogenic disorders.
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Fig-5: Typical electromyographic
findings in normal and abnormal muscles. |
More
sophisticated EMG techniques are available to quantify
abnormalities of motor unit potential configuration and
recruitment but these techniques are not usually needed in the
evaluation of patients most often referred to the neurosurgeon.
Single-fiber EMG is a technique that uses a smaller needle
electrode in order to better define the complexity of motor unit
potentials and the jitter between fibers. Jitter is defined as
the interpotential interval between the discharge of two fibers
belonging to the same motor unit. In a normal motor unit any two
muscle fibers will fire with little variation in time. In a
motor unit where there is an abnormality of neuromuscular
junction transmission, this interval between firing of
individual muscle fibers can increase and be variable
(increased jitter). If transmission is totally blocked, the
second muscle potential may be absent. This technique is the
most sensitive electrophysiologic test in evaluating patients
for such primary disorders of the neuromuscular junction as
myasthenia gravis or the Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome. It
is most sensitive when testing a clinically weak muscle but can
be abnormal in clinically normal muscles. Evaluating motor unit
potentials for jitter is also done by the electromyographer
during routine EMG by visual and auditory inspection of the
motor units. Thus, significant abnormalities of neuromuscular
junction transmission may be suggested during careful analysis
of the motor unit potential during routine EMG.
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Tests of
Autonomic Function |
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There is a
wide variety of electrophysiologic tests performed to evaluate
autonomic function. Frequently. the RR interval variation on
electrocardiography during paced respiration is studied to
evaluate cardiac parasympathetic innervation. This test is
often the first electrophysiologic abnormality in patients with
diabetic neuropathy. The quantitative sudomotor axon reflex
test detects postganglionic sudomotor abnormalities and is
available in many laboratories. Guides to the evaluation and
testing of patients with autonomic failure are presented in
several excellent reviews.
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Diffuse
Neuromuscular Disorders |
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Neuropathies are in part classified based on the abnormalities
seen on NCS and EMG. Demyelination (uniform or segmental) and
axonal loss in both sensory and motor fibers can be studied
physiologically. The study of more than one limb is needed to
determine if the
process is focal or diffuse. Side-to-side comparison is also
very useful, especially if one of the limbs is abnormal.
Superimposed compressive mononeuropathies occur in patients
with neuromuscular disease, so abnormalities in typical
locations such as at the elbow or at the fibular head need to be
evaluated fully. Testing one sensory and motor nerve in both an
upper and lower extremity is a standard screen for neuropathy.
This screen should always include symptomatic areas. Needle
examination of a few muscles is important to rule out axonal
injury because the motor NCS can be normal early in a motor axonopathy. The EMG study can also render information concerning
the chronicity of the process. If a sensory nerve is needed for biopsy
purposes, it may be helpful to pick a nerve that has an abnormal
NCS response. Sural nerves are commonly biopsied. A sural nerve
with an abnormal response is often a good biopsy choice.
However, an unobtainable sural sensory response does not
necessarily reflect a sural nerve that will be too badly injured
to demonstrate pathologic abnormalities. If a neuropathy is
studied within the first few days of symptom onset, NCSs may be
normal and repeat studies may be necessary.
Myopathies
are also evaluated by EMG. Each study of a possible myopathy
must begin with NCS to rule out a superimposed neuropathy
because some diseases can cause both myopathy and neuropathy.
These disorders include sarcoidosis, thyroid disease, alcohol
toxicity, HIV-related disease and rheumatologic disorders.
Also, some neuropathic disorders begin with proximal weakness
and mimic a myopathy; examples are spinal muscular atrophy. porphyria, lead exposure, and occasional cases of Guillain-Barre
syndrome.
Needle
examination in myopathies is helpful for two reasons. First, the
pattern of abnormality may be helpful in narrowing the
differential diagnosis. For instance, most inflammatory
myopathies have markedly increased insertional and spontaneous
activity. Some myopathies, such as polymyositis and inclusion
body myositis, have MUPs with both myopathic and neuropathic
features. Steroid myopathies often do not have spontaneous
activity present, which differentiates them from inflammatory
myopathies. Metabolic myopathies may have little or no EMG
abnormalities. A typical screening examination for a myopathy
would include EMG of both proximal and distal muscles in two
limbs. Also, paraspinal muscles should be included as they may
be the only muscles demonstrating spontaneous activity in
several myopathies including polymyositis and acid maltase
deficiency.
Second, in
myopathy, EMG may be used to aid in picking a muscle to biopsy.
Biopsy of a clinically moderately involved muscle that has
moderate EMG involvement on the contralateral side may increase
the yield. Muscles should not be biopsied in a location near
the needle examination because of the inflammatory reaction
that may ensue, leading to confusion when evaluating the biopsy
specimen.
Suspected
neuromuscular junction disease is studied first by a
conventional myopathy screen (NCS plus EMG) to rule out an
underlying neuropathic or myopathic abnormality. Further testing
with repetitive nerve stimulation or single-fiber EMG is then
performed in search of a primary defect of neuromuscular
junction transmission.
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Radiculopathy |
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Electrophysiologic studies can be very useful in documenting the
presence of a radiculopathy. However. a normal NCS/EMG
study does not rule out the presence of a radiculopathy. When a
patient with a radiculopathy is studied. a screening NCS is
performed in the symptomatic limb to exclude a concurrent
entrapment neuropathy such as a carpal tunnel syndrome or a
more diffuse neuropathy. Although patients with radiculopathy
may exhibit sensory loss clinically, sensory conductions should
be normal because the cell body in the dorsal root ganglion is
distal to the point of root injury. If the sensory response is
abnormal, localization to a plexus or peripheral nerve is
suggested.
Motor
conduction studies usually show normal distal latency and
conduction velocity because stimulation sites are distal to the
site of the lesion, Amplitudes usually do not drop with injury
to one root because other roots are also innervating each muscle
tested, Axonal injury in the root is seldom complete. With
severe root injury as in multiple root avulsions or a cauda
equina syndrome, amplitudes of the CMAP may diminish, F-wave
latencies may be prolonged because of focal demyelination of the
fast conducting motor fibers at the root level. Usually with a
lesion of one root, however. other levels are sufficiently
active to maintain a normal F-wave latency. Also, root injury
may be focal, allowing some impulses to still get through. As
mentioned, F-wave latencies can remain prolonged indefinitely
after root injury.
H-reflex
testing may be useful in S1 radiculopathy. Unfortunately, as
mentioned previously. many normal patients will have unobtainable
H-reflexes and the H-reflex abnormalities can be present
indefinitely after nerve injury, The advantage of the H-reflex
is that it involves transmission along sensory and motor
pathways.
Needle
examination is the most useful tool in evaluating radiculopathy,
particularly if weakness exists, The most specific localizing
finding is spontaneous activity in a myotomal distribution. A
myotome is composed of muscles that have innervation
contributed from the same root level. Neuropathic change of
motor unit potentials may also be helpful but is less reliable
for localization. After significant root injury, the first EMG
change is delayed recruitment. Denervation changes may appear
in a proximal to distal progression. Since the most proximal
muscles are the paraspinal muscles, spontaneous activity may be
seen within 1 week to 10 days in these muscles. Because of
significant overlap in root innervation of paraspinal muscles.
localization is imprecise. Needle examination of paraspinal
muscles should therefore include several paraspinal levels above
and below the site of presumed involvement to increase the
yield. Within 2 weeks of significant root injury, spontaneous
activity is commonly seen in paraspinal muscles and is often
seen in proximal muscles. At 3 weeks distal muscles may also
be involved. Motor unit instability can often be appreciated if
active denervation changes are occurring and this may precede
the formation of complex MUPs, Following resolution of the
radiculopathy, denervation changes may disappear. However, since
they sometimes persist to some degree indefinitely, a previous EMG study in an individual with a history of radiculopathy
would be useful for comparison to be confident of an active
ongoing process unless the findings are dramatic.
Several
muscles in the symptomatic limb that are innervated by different
roots and nerves should be studied to search for a myotomal
distribution of abnormality. Because of multiple root
contribution to the innervation of a single muscle, it is often
difficult to be certain about the localization of the
radiculopathy. With post-EMG surgical correlation, it has been
shown that common radiculopathies such as C6 and C7
radiculopathies cannot necessarily be distinguished by EMG.
By utilizing standard references of muscle innervation, however,
focal denervation in two to three muscles innervated by the same
root and different nerves is suggestive of a radiculopathy at
that root level (Fig-6). Not all muscles
innervated by an individual root will necessarily show
denervation changes. This is dependent on the time sequence of
the EMG study relative to the onset of symptoms, the severity of
the root lesion. and the variability of innervation patterns.
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Fig-6: Chart of myotomal
innervation. |
Focal
paraspinal muscle abnormalities in EMG help to localize the
lesion to the root level. Paraspinal muscles are innervated by
dorsal rami. However, paraspinal muscles may not be involved if
fibers to ventral rami are preferentially involved by root
compression. If paraspinal muscles show an increase in
spontaneous activity at multiple levels throughout the spine,
other causes should be considered such as carcinomatous
meningitis, polyradicular neuropathy, diabetic radiculopathy,
or inflammatory myopathy. Abnormalities need to be bracketed by
normal paraspinal EMG studies to ensure that a focal process is
present. Paraspinal EMG examination can be abnormal up to
4
days following
myelography so EMG studies should be done prior to myelography
if needed. Also, paraspinal muscles may be abnormal indefinitely
in a region of previous back surgery so abnormalities in this
situation need to be interpreted with caution.
The causes
of paraspinal and limb radicular abnormalities by EMG are not
determined by the study. Compressive or noncompressive causes
such as diabetic radiculopathy or herpes zoster may be present.
If diffuse EMG abnormalities are encountered in one limb, the
contralateral limb should be studied. If that limb is abnormal,
studies should proceed to the second limb to evaluate the
possibility of a more diffuse process such as a neuropathy or
motor neuron disease. Bilateral leg involvement is common in
radiculopathy even in an asymptomatic limb. Conus medullaris
lesions, a cauda equina syndrome or spinal stenosis often leads
to bilateral, asymmetric electrophysiologic findings. If lower
sacral roots need to be studied, sphincter EMG can be
performed.
In the
upper extremity, a common problem is evaluating a traumatic
injury. With significant trauma, denervation changes are seen in
weak muscles and activation of MUPs imply nerve continuity to
that muscle. If root avulsion alone is present, sensory NCS
values are normal. However, coexistent plexus injury often
occurs, resulting in abnormal sensory NCS values.
In the
lower extremity, diagnostic evaluation of foot drop is very
common. Differentiating peroneal neuropathy from L5
radiculopathy is done by study of peroneal motor and sensory
conduction and EMG study of L5-innervated muscles inside and
outside of the distribution of the peroneal nerve. These muscles
include the gluteus medius, short head of the biceps femoris,
and tibialis posterior. Needle examination of the extensor
digitorum brevis and abductor hallucis should be interpreted
with caution because of frequent trauma to these muscles and the
finding of abnormalities in patients who are normal clinically.
Thus, NCS/EMG is useful in an evaluation of radiculopathy
because studies will detect other causes of limb numbness and
weakness, such as entrapment neuropathy or diffuse neuropathy,
and can often document the radicular pattern of denervation.
Studies may be less useful in patients with pure sensory
complaints or a recent onset of injury. The sensitivity is
similar to that of myelography.
It must be recognized that asymptomatic subjects with a
normal neurological examination can have EMG evidence of
radiculopathy so these findings must be correlated with the
clinical history and physical examination.
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Plexopathy |
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Plexopathies cause focal neurological dysfunction and are often
divided into traumatic and non traumatic causes. Common
nontraumatic causes of plexopathy include neuralgic amyotrophy
(Parsonage- Turner syndrome), plexopathy due to tumor invasion,
radiation-induced plexopathy, and diabetic amyotrophy.
Sensory
conductions are useful in plexopathy localization because the
dorsal root ganglia are proximal to plexus lesions, resulting in
abnormal sensory responses, most often a low SNAP amplitude.
Motor conduction studies are less helpful in differentiating
radiculopathy from plexopathy because they are usually normal.
With multiple root or severe plexus injury, CMAP amplitudes may
diminish as a result of axonal dropout. Similarly, if fast
conducting fibers are interrupted, F-wave latency may be
prolonged in either localization.
The distribution of EMG
abnormalities is an important factor in localizing the lesion to
the plexus. Paraspinal muscle abnormalities suggest root
involvement and are absent in plexus disease. The limb pattern
of denervation changes is helpful for plexus localization. A
typical example would be deltoid, triceps, and extensor
digitorum communis muscle denervation with sparing of the biceps
and spinati from a posterior cord lesion of the brachial plexus.
The NCS/EMG study may localize the lesion to a plexus but cannot
define the etiology. Specific findings, however, may be
suggestive of a specific etiology. The Parsonage-Turner syndrome
can affect a single root, trunk, cord, or nerve. One-third to
one-half of patients may have bilateral symptoms and as many as
one-half will have bilateral EMG abnormalities.
Thus, if the Parsonage- Turner
syndrome is suggested clinically, bilateral upper limb EMG
should be performed even if one limb is asymptomatic, Lesions
may also be patchy within the brachial plexus in this disorder.
Myokymic discharges are suggestive of radiation-induced injury
as opposed to tumor infiltration.' Diabetic amyotrophy is
suspected in a diabetic patient with a typical history; the
NCS/EMG study usually documents concurrent radiculopathy and
neuropathy making localization to the lumbosacral plexus
difficult. Spontaneous activity is often prominent in the
proximal muscles involved but precise localization by EMG
is unlikely in these patients because of their underlying
neuropathic changes. Since etiology cannot be determined despite
localization to the plexus, a clinical decision needs to be made
concerning the use of neuroimaging studies to rule out tumorous
involvement.
The
thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) constitutes a specific type of
brachial plexopathy that merits separate mention. It is best
divided into true neurogenic TOS and disputed or non-neurogenic
TOS. In neurogenic TOS the patient complains of paresthesias of the
medial arm, forearm or hand and has weakness and atrophy of
median - greater than ulnar-innervated muscles in the hand. This
is due to compression of the distal C8 and T1 roots or the lower
trunk of the brachial plexus. The pattern of the nerve
conduction abnormalities in this type of TOS is characteristic.
Because median nerve sensory fibers travel through the C5 and C6
roots and the upper trunk of the brachial plexus. the median
sensory responses in the hand are normal. Ulnar sensory
responses in the hand are abnormal (low amplitudes) because
these fibers arc compressed proximally. Motor fibers to the
median-innervated hand muscles do run through the C8 and T1
roots and the lower trunk so the CMAP amplitudes recorded from
the abductor pollicis brevis are low and EMG of that muscle
shows chronic denervation changes. The ulnar motor study may
show low or low
-normal CMAP amplitudes, and chronic denervation changes may
be seen in the first dorsal interosseus muscle. Because the
process is slowly progressive, prominent spontaneous activity
may be absent. Patients with non-neurogenic TOS haw a normal
neurological and electrophysiologic examination.
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Mononeuropathy |
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Peripheral
nerves can be studied by both NCS and EMG in the evaluation of
mononeuropathies. Discussion will be limited to the most common
mononeuropathies evaluated by the neurosurgeon. Motor
conduction studies of the facial nerve are obtained by
stimulating the facial nerve as it exits the stylomastoid
foramen under the ear while recording with a surface electrode
over a facial muscle, usually the orbicularis oculi. Motor NCSs
are particularly useful prognostically in patients with Bell's
palsy. if CMAP amplitudes are compared between sides 1 to 2
weeks after the onset. In patients in whom the amplitude
on the symptomatic side is less than 10 percent of that on the
normal side, 79 percent will have incomplete recovery. More
than 90 percent of patients will have a good recovery if the
amplitude is greater than 10 percent of that on the normal side.
The drop in amplitude is reflective of axonal loss in most
cases. Some patients with Bells palsy can have a neurapraxic
injury without a drop in amplitude: their prognosis for early
recovery is excellent as the conduction block resolves.
Because the
facial nerve is usually injured along its path in the temporal
bone. NCS during the first days of Bell's palsy will not be
helpful in localization. Blink reflexes can be used to
demonstrate a peripheral seventh nerve lesion with prolongation
or absence of ipsilateral
R1 and R2 responses. If the R1 response is present
or returns early in the course of Bell's palsy, the prognosis is
good.
EMG is an
important tool in the evaluation of facial nerve palsies because
axonal loss may not necessarily affect the CMAP
amplitude. The needle examination can help assess the degree of
axonal injury and also be used to follow reinnervation. If no
movement of facial muscles is seen clinically, and nerve
grafting is being considered. EMG of several facial muscles can
be helpful to look for the presence of voluntary motor units
that would suggest that nerve continuity exists to those
muscles. EMG change over time would help determine if
reinnervation is occurring.
Electrophysiologic study of diaphragm function is important in
patients with unilateral or bilateral diaphragm weakness and in
patients
who are difficult to wean from a ventilator. Frequently,
patients who cannot be weaned may have concurrent, unsuspected
neuromuscular disease. Also, several neuromuscular diseases may
affect the diaphragm and respiratory muscles early in the course
of the disease. These include myotonic dystrophy, acid maltase
deficiency and motor neuron disease.
Initially,
a screening extremity study should be done to rule out an
underlying neuropathy or myopathy. If this study is abnormal,
specific study of the diaphragm may not be needed. Phrenic nerve
conduction studies can be done by stimulating the phrenic nerve
superficially behind the sternocleidomastoid muscle and
recording from the diaphragm with a surface electrode in one of
several locations. The draw backs to this method are due to
the technical demands of the study, especially when performed in
an intensive care unit. and the low amplitudes of the CMAP
recorded from a normal diaphragm. Thus, significant neuropathic
or myopathic involvement can be present with relativey normal motor
conduction studies of the phrenic nerve. Direct needle
examination of the diaphragm is of more utility. This can be
done safely even if the patient is on a ventilator. Special
care is needed to avoid pulmonary structures in patients with
chronic obstructive lung disease because their diaphragms are
often more caudal in location than normal. The needle electrode
is inserted through the superficial muscles and localization is
proven by respiratory variation in diaphragm firing. It is not
uncommon for active motor units to be found in diaphragms that
were believed paralyzed on radiologic study. The needle
examination can quantitate the degree of denervation. Myopathic
abnormalities may be more difficult to recognize in the
diaphragm because normal MUPs appear somewhat myopathic in
this muscle. The presence of motor units with respiratory
variation tells the neurosurgeon that phrenic nerve continuity
exists and, especially after trauma, that recovery may ensue. Reinnervation
of the diaphragm can be followed by serial studies.
The most
common median neuropathy referred to the EMG laboratory is the
carpal tunnel syndrome. There are several different methods used
to study the median nerve distally. Most commonly
performed is an orthodromic study with stimulation in the palm
and recording at the wrist with surface electrodes. Sensory
conduction is usually the first parameter to be abnormal in the
carpal tunnel syndrome. Prolongation of the distal latency
occurs early because of focal demyelination of the median nerve
in the tunnel. If digit-to-wrist studies are done, the distal
latency may seem more normal because the focal conduction
abnormality is averaged out over a longer distance. Both median
nerves should be studied if a carpal tunnel syndrome is
suspected because bilateral occurrence is present in up to 55
percent of patients, usually more severe in the dominant
hand. In addition to using normal value, of median sensory
nerve conduction for the determination of abnormality, asymmetry
between sides and comparison to ulnar sensory response, is often
useful. A 0.5-ms difference in distal latency at a
stimulation to recording distance of 8 cm is a significant
asymmetry between ipsilateral median and ulnar recordings. If
digital stimulation is done. a middle finger study may be more sensitive
than a ring finger study. Early motor conduction
studies may be normal or show a slightly prolonged distal
latency. As denervation changes occur, the CMAP amplitude will
decline, signifying axonal dropout. F-wave latencies may also
become prolonged.
Sometimes
EMG of median-innervated hand muscles is useful to document the
presence of axonal injury, motor conduction studies can be
normal in the face of active denervation changes in the hand.
Examination of the abductor pollicis brevis should be done first and,
if normal, the opponens pollicis should be examined. This study
may influence the level of aggressiveness toward a surgical
approach, especially if the abnormalities by NCS/EMG are seen to
progress over time.
Conventional NCS can be normal even if a carpal tunnel syndrome
is present. A median nerve mapping study (inching) may be useful
in the event that the study is normal and a carpal tunnel
syndrome is highly suspected. A routine study for the carpal
tunnel syndrome should also include ulnar motor and sensory
studies to evaluate for a more diffuse neuropathy, and an EMG
study, if neck pain is present. to rule out a cervical
radiculopathy. If median nerve involvement more proximally is
considered, needle examination of the pronator teres, flexor
carpi radialis, or muscles in the distribution of the anterior
interosseus nerve will aid in localization. In an anterior interosseus neuropathy, denervation changes are present only in
the muscles innervated by that nerve branch, and median motor
and sensory studies in the hand are normal.
Ulnar nerve
studies can be very useful in localizing lesions along the
course of the nerve. Sensory responses from distal palmar
stimulation test the superficial sensory branch, which passes
through Guyon's canal. Digital testing, however, involves the
dorsal cutaneous branch, which originates before Guyon's canal
and would be spared by a lesion in the canal. When ulnar motor
studies are performed, the elbow must be flexed (usually greater
than 90 degrees) to ensure that the ulnar nerve is taut.
Stimulation above and below the elbow at the ulnar groove, in
addition to stimulation at the wrist, helps localize the region
of conduction block by a significant drop in amplitude
(conduction failure), a dispersed CMAP waveform, or a drop in
conduction velocity. It is often difficult to differentiate
between retrocondylar compression and cubital tunnel
involvement.
Stimulating short
segments in 1-cm intervals above and below the ulnar groove may
help demonstrate a conduction blocks.
If a CMAP
amplitude from proximal ulnar stimulation is significantly
diminished from that achieved with distal stimulation, one must
be sure a Martin-Gruber anastamosis (a normal variant) is not
present. The most common type of this anastamosis involves ulnar
fibers traveling with the median nerve proximally and joining
the ulnar nerve in the forearm, resulting in a significantly
higher CMAP amplitude with distal stimulation of the ulnar
nerve. Median nerve stimulation proximally with recording from
the abductor digiti quinti can demonstrate this cross-over.
The flexor
carpi ulnaris and flexor digitorum profundus arise in the
forearm and usually are involved by EMG in very proximal ulnar
nerve lesions. Nerve twigs to both of these muscles take off
from the ulnar nerve distal to the cubital tunnel.
Unfortunately, nerve fascicles to these forearm muscles can be
spared in compression at the elbow, especially if neurapraxia
predominates. Hypothenar and intrinsic hand muscles are
innervated by the ulnar nerve after it travels through Guyon's
canal and both should be involved with compression at the canal.
Hypothenar muscles may be spared if compression occurs in the
palm. Motor and sensory conduction studies of the median nerve
are needed to rule out neuropathy and EMG of other muscles in
the extremity should be done to rule out C8-T1 radiculopathy
or a more diffuse denervating process.
Localization of a radial neuropathy is aided by study of the
superficial radial nerve response. This nerve originates
proximal to the posterior interosseus nerve takeoff and is
spared in posterior interosseus neuropathy but is involved in
proximal radial nerve lesions. By EMG the triceps muscle is
usually spared in radial nerve
compression at the humeral groove while muscles from the
brachioradialis distally are involved. Posterior interosseus
entrapment at the arcade of Frohse will spare the extensor
carpi radialis longus and brevis because nerve twigs to these
muscles exit the radial nerve proximal to the arcade.
Superficial
peroneal sensory conduction studies are frequently abnormal in
common or superficial peroneal neuropathy. Motor studies are
usually recorded from the extensor digitorum brevis after
stimulation at the ankle, below the knee, and above the knee. If
a focal conduction block is not found by a drop in conduction
velocity or amplitude across a segment of the peroneal nerve
(usually at the fibular head), inching studies can be performed
across the fibular head if compression is suspected or better
localization of the block is needed. If the extensor digitorum
brevis is severely atrophic, motor conduction studies can be
done by recording from the anterior tibialis muscle. F-wave
prolongation can occur with an abnormality anywhere along the
peroneal nerve or more proximal fibers, so it is relatively non
localizing if the peripheral conduction is abnormal,
Needle
examination is used to differentiate among L5 radiculopathy,
plexopathy and mononeuropathy. The short head of the biceps
femoris muscle is innervated by the peroneal trunk of the
sciatic nerve and will often be involved in an L5 radiculopathy
or lumbosacral plexus lesion. It should, however, be spared if
peroneal compression occurs at the fibular head. Common
peroneal, superficial peroneal and deep peroneal neuropathies
are further defined by needle examination of the muscles
innervated by those nerves. The extensor digitorum brevis (EDB)
is a relatively unreliable muscle to study because denervation
changes may be present in normal subjects. Therefore, isolated denervation changes in that muscle, or low CMAP amplitudes on
the peroneal motor conduction study recorded from the EDB
without denervation changes in other muscles supplied by the
peroneal nerve or L5 root need to be interpreted with caution.
If peroneal studies are abnormal, tibial motor and sural
sensory studies should be performed in addition to contralateral
studies to evaluate for lumbosacral plexopathy, a cauda equina
syndrome or a more diffuse neuropathic process.
The most
common tibial distribution entrapment is the tarsal tunnel
syndrome. Patients can be evaluated by NCS/EMG, but this is
often difficult technically. Sensory responses from medial and
lateral plantar nerves are obtained with orthodromic surface
stimulation at the plantar surface and recording from the
tibial nerve proximal to the tunnel at the ankle. Comparison
of the symptomatic to the asymptomatic side is an important
control, Because this study can be technically difficult, an
absent plantar SNAP is often of uncertain significance. When
the response has a prolonged distal latency. especially if it is
asymmetric with the contralateral side, there is more confidence
in diagnosing nerve entrapment. A study in which small needle
electrodes are placed near the plantar nerves ("near nerve
recording") may be more sensitive in detecting a conduction
block. Patients often tolerate this procedure poorly. If
responses are found to be abnormal, further NCS should ensue to
rule out a diffuse peripheral neuropathy. In the setting of a
diffuse peripheral neuropathy it is difficult to diagnose this
syndrome with an electrophysiologic study. Motor conduction
studies may show a prolonged distal latency when recording is
performed from the abductor hallucis muscle and the tibial nerve
is stimulated. Once again, EMG abnormalities in the abductor
hallucis muscle may be unreliable because abnormalities in that
muscle are seen in normal subjects. Needle examinations of
the hamstring, gastrocnemius and soleus muscles are also used
to search for a more proximal tibial nerve lesion. A follow-up
conduction study can document improvement after tarsal tunnel
surgery.
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Intraoperative
NCS/EMG |
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NCS and EMG
can be very useful as operative monitoring tools. Facial nerve
studies prior to acoustic neuroma surgery can help in assessing
the degree of facial nerve involvement and predicting the
prognosis for facial nerve recovery. If moderate or severe neuropathic findings are found by NCS/EMG preoperatively, the
likelihood of full recovery postoperatively is poor.
Intraoperative recording can be helpful in several ways. Neurotonic discharges, which are bursts of high-frequency
discharges, recorded from a needle electrode in a facial muscle
occur after nerve irritation. This can allow instant feedback to
the neurosurgeon if on audio. The facial nerve or suspected
facial nerve fibers can be stimulated in the operative field
with recording from a facial muscle either by a surface or
needle electrode to determine if the fibers are in fact facial
nerve and if nerve continuity exists. .
Facial
nerve studies may be helpful in surgery for hemifacial spasm (HFS).
In patients with HFS, either stimulation of the supraorbital
nerve during a blink response or direct stimulation of a motor
nerve can result in a response in muscles innervated by branches
of the facial nerve other than that stimulated.
This "lateral spread" is due
to ephaptic transmission at the site of facial nerve cornpression.
Intraoperatively. facial muscles can be monitored for neurotonic discharges during surgery for HFS. Intraoperative
disappearance of the lateral spread response correlates highly
with resolution of the HFS, while persistence of this response
during surgery carries a poor prognosis for complete recovery.
Thus, further search for compressive vessel is suggested if the
lateral spread response persists.
When
peripheral nerves in the limbs are being operated upon, EMG
monitoring with needle electrodes in appropriate muscles can be
used to listen for neurotonic discharges. Also, motor or sensory
nerve recordings from a nerve stimulated at the operative site
can ensure continuity and sometimes assist with localization of
a conduction block. The best example is ulnar stimulation after
flexor carpi ulnaris division to determine if a conduction block
is localized to the forearm or is present at the elbow. If the
conduction block was localized to the forearm, cubital tunnel release
is done without nerve transposition. If
the conduction block was proximal to the medial epicondyle,
transposition out of the ulnar groove is performed.
Needle
recording from the anal sphincter can be useful in surgery for
a tethered spinal cord. Monitoring for neurotonic discharges
and stimulation studies may help the surgeon avoid transecting
roots.
Finally,
intraoperative monitoring is used by some during selective
dorsal rhizotomy. Pathologic rootlets are thought to contribute
to excitatory input of motor fibers. By stimulating portions of
the dorsal root and evaluating which root fascicles cause
contraction in multiple muscles or a high degree of contraction
in individual muscles, roots are sectioned selectively, leaving
some of the root at each level intact to preserve sensory function. However, it remains uncertain that intraoperative
monitoring improves the results over those achieved by random
root sectioning.
Operative
monitoring is technically demanding because of multiple
potential sources of electrical interference and because of
temperature considerations. Also, neuromuscular junction blocking
agents cannot be used fully during the operation, although they
may be used for intubation.
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