Negative Chronotropic Cardiovascular Changes in Lumbar Spine Surgery: A Potential Spinal-Cardiac Reflex?

Kashif Ali Sultan, Mohammad Ashraf, Attika Chaudhary, Laulwa Al Salloum, Naseeruddin Ghulam, Nazir Ahmed, Hassan Ismahel, Minaam Farooq, Javed Iqbal, Naveed Ashraf
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Abstract

Abstract Cardiovascular changes following lumbar spine surgery in a prone position are exceedingly rare. Over the past 20 years, a total of six cases have been published where patients experienced varying degrees of bradycardia, hypotension, and asystole, which could be attributed to intraoperative dural manipulation. As such, there is emerging evidence for a potential neural-mediated spinal-cardiac reflex. The authors report their experience of negative chronotropy during an elective lumbar spine surgery that coincided with dural manipulation and review the available literature. A 34-year-old male presented with a long-standing history of lower back pain recently deteriorating to bilaterally radiating leg pain, with restricted left leg raise, and numbness at the left L5 dermatomal territory. The patient was an athletic police officer with no comorbidities or past medical history. Magnetic resonance imaging lumbosacral spine revealed spinal stenosis most pronounced at L4/L5 and disc bulges at L3/L4 and L5/S1. The patient opted for lumbar decompression surgery. After an unremarkable comprehensive preoperative workup, including cardiac evaluation (electrocardiogram, echocardiogram), the patient was induced general anesthesia in a prone position. A lumbar incision was made from L2 to S1. When the left L4 nerve root was retracted while removing the prolapsed disc at L4/L5, the anesthetist cautioned the surgeon of bradycardia (34 beats per minute [bpm]), and the surgery was immediately stopped. The heart rate improved to 60 bpm within 30 seconds. When the root was later retracted again, a second episode of bradycardia occurred for 4 minutes with heart rate declining to 48 bpm. The surgery was stopped, and after 4 minutes, the anesthetist administered 600 µg of atropine. The heart rate then rose to 73 bpm within 1 minute. Other potential causes for bradycardia were excluded. The total blood loss was estimated to be 100 mL. He remains well at his 6-month follow-up and has returned to work as normal. Akin to previously published cases, each episode of bradycardia coincided with dural manipulation, which may indicate a possible reflex between the spinal dura mater and the cardiovascular system. Such a rare adverse event may occur even in seemingly healthy, young individuals, and anesthetists should caution the operating surgeon of bradycardias to exclude operative manipulation of the dura as the cause. While this phenomenon is only reported in a handful of lumbar spine surgery cases, it provides evidence for a potential spinal-cardiac physiological reflex in the lumbar spine that may be neural mediated and should be investigated further.

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腰椎手术后负性变时性心血管改变:一种潜在的脊柱-心脏反射?
俯卧位腰椎手术后心血管发生变化极为罕见。在过去的20年中,共有6例患者出现不同程度的心动过缓、低血压和心脏骤停,这可能归因于术中硬膜操作。因此,有新的证据表明可能存在神经介导的脊髓-心脏反射。作者报告了他们在选择性腰椎手术中发生负性时变性的经验,该手术与硬脑膜操作相吻合,并回顾了现有的文献。34岁男性,长期腰痛病史,最近恶化为双侧放射性腿痛,左腿抬起受限,左侧L5皮区麻木。患者是一名体育警察,无合并症或既往病史。腰骶椎管狭窄在L4/L5最明显,椎间盘突出在L3/L4和L5/S1。患者选择腰椎减压手术。在进行了包括心脏评估(心电图、超声心动图)在内的普通全面术前检查后,患者接受了俯卧位的全身麻醉。腰椎从L2至S1处切开。当左L4神经根在L4/L5切除椎间盘脱垂时,麻醉师提醒外科医生注意心动过缓(34次/分钟[bpm]),手术立即停止。心率在30秒内提高到每分钟60次。当根再次缩回时,发生第二次心动过缓,持续4分钟,心率降至48次/分钟。手术停止,4分钟后,麻醉师给药600µg阿托品。然后心率在1分钟内上升到每分钟73次。排除了其他可能导致心动过缓的原因。估计总失血量为100毫升。他在6个月的随访中表现良好,并已恢复正常工作。与先前发表的病例类似,每次心动过缓发作都与硬脑膜操作同时发生,这可能表明硬脑膜和心血管系统之间可能存在反射。这种罕见的不良事件甚至可能发生在看似健康的年轻人身上,麻醉师应提醒心动过缓的手术医生排除手术操作硬脑膜的原因。虽然这一现象仅在少数腰椎手术病例中报道,但它为腰椎潜在的脊髓-心脏生理反射提供了证据,可能是神经介导的,应该进一步研究。
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