2 resultados para auditory evoked potentials

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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The aim of this study is to evaluate if spinal cord ischemia (SCI), especially its late presentation, and can be correlated to the results of intraoperative evoked potential monitoring (IOM). Methods. This study is a physician-initiated, retrospective, single-center, non-randomized study. Data from all patients undergoing a thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm surgical repair (TAAA SR) between January 2016 and March 2020 IOM was collected and analyzed. Results. During the study period, 261 patients underwent TAAA SR with MEP/SSEPs monitoring [190 males, 73%; median age 65 (57-71)]. Thirty-seven patients suffered from SCI, for an overall rate of 14% (permanent 9%). When stratifying patients according to the SCI onset, 18 patients presented with an early (11 permanent) and 19 with a late SCI (<24h) (11 permanent). Of 261 patients undergoing TAAA SR with IOM, 15 were excluded due to changes in the upper extremity motor evoked potentials. For the remaining 246, the association between SCI and IOM was investigated: only irreversible IOM loss without peripheral changes have been found to be a risk factor for late onset SCI (p=.006). Furthermore, given that no statistical differences were found between the two groups when no IOM changes were recorded (p=.679), this situation cannot reliably rule out any SCI in our cohort. Independent risk factors for late spinal cord ischemia onset found at multivariate analysis were smoking history (p=.008), BMI>28 (p=.048) and TAAA extent II (p=.009). The irreversible MEP change without peripheral showed a trend of significance (p=.052). Conclusions. Evoked potential intraoperative monitoring is an important adjunct during thoracoabdominal aortic open repair to predict and possibly prevent spinal cord ischemia. Irreversible IOM loss without peripheral changes was predictive of late SCI, therefore more attention should be paid to the postoperative management of this subgroup of patients.

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Although the prominent role of neural oscillations in perception and cognition has been continuously investigated, some critical questions remain unanswered. My PhD thesis was aimed at addressing some of them. First, can we dissociate oscillatory underpinnings of perceptual accuracy and subjective awareness? Current work would strongly suggest that this dissociation can be drawn. While the fluctuations in alpha-amplitude decide perceptual bias and metacognitive abilities, the speed of alpha activity (i.e., alpha-frequency) dictates sensory sampling, shaping perceptual accuracy. Second, how are these oscillatory mechanisms integrated during attention? The obtained results indicate that a top-down visuospatial mechanism modulates neural assemblies in visual areas via oscillatory re-alignment and coherence in the alpha/beta range within the fronto-parietal brain network. These perceptual predictions are reflected in the retinotopically distributed posterior alpha-amplitude, while perceptual accuracy is explained by the higher alpha-frequency at the to-be-attended location. Finally, sensory input, elaborated via fast gamma oscillations, is linked to specific phases of this slower activity via oscillatory nesting, enabling integration of the feedback-modulated oscillatory activity with sensory information. Third, how can we relate this oscillatory activity to other neural markers of behaviour (i.e., event-related potentials)? The obtained results favour the oscillatory model of ERP genesis, where alpha-frequency shapes the latency of early evoked-potentials, namely P1, with both neural indices being related to perceptual accuracy. On the other hand, alpha-amplitude dictates the amplitude of later P3 evoked-response, whereas both indices shape subjective awareness. Crucially, by combining different methodological approaches, including neurostimulation (TMS) and neuroimaging (EEG), current work identified these oscillatory-behavior links as causal and not just as co-occurring events. Current work aimed at ameliorating the use of the TMS-EEG approach by explaining inter-individual differences in the stimulation outcomes, which could be proven crucial in the way we design entrainment experiments and interpret the results in both research and clinical settings.