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Spinal Motor Evoked Potentials in Brain Surgery

H

Heinrich-Heine University, Duesseldorf

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Glioma
Brain Tumor

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02402075
ASze_DF_001

Details and patient eligibility

About

During neurosurgical resection of brain tumors within brain areas for motor control, it is important to monitor motor function. For this muscle motor evoked potentials are used. Those are elicited by transcranial and direct cortical stimulation. Motor responses are recorded from muscles. In neurosurgical procedures for spinal cord tumors, the same methods are used, but additionally motor activity is recorded from the spinal cord. This is called spinal motor evoked potentials. It is known that the relation between spinal and muscle motor evoked potentials helps to extent the resection of spinal cord tumors. This study implements the spinal motor evoked potential into brain tumor surgery and analyses the relationship between spinal and muscle motor evoked potentials. With this, detection of injury to the brain area for motor control might be discovered earlier and thus tumor resection can be performed safely.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • > 18 years
  • tumor location adjacent to the motor cortex and corticospinal tract

Exclusion criteria

  • minor
  • neurological degenerative diseases
  • neurological immunological diseases
  • drug abuse
  • implanted medical devices such as cardiac pacemaker
  • spine deformation

Trial design

40 participants in 1 patient group

Brain tumor
Description:
patients with glioma

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Andrea Szelenyi, MD PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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