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Comparison of Contralateral Acceleromyography and Electromyography for Posttetanic Count Measurement

Title
Comparison of Contralateral Acceleromyography and Electromyography for Posttetanic Count Measurement
Authors
Joo, HyunyoungCho, SooyoungLee, Jong WhaKim, Won JoongLee, Hyun JungWoo, Jae HeeLee, GiyearBaik, Hee Jung
Ewha Authors
백희정우재희김원중이종화조수영이현정
SCOPUS Author ID
백희정scopus; 우재희scopus; 김원중scopus; 이종화scopusscopus; 조수영scopus; 이현정scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
ANESTHESIOLOGY
ISSN
0003-3022JCR Link

1528-1175JCR Link
Citation
ANESTHESIOLOGY vol. 138, no. 3, pp. 241 - 248
Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS &

WILKINS
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background:Electromyography has advantages over mechanomyography and acceleromyography. Previously, agreement of the train-of-four counts between acceleromyography and electromyography was found to be fair. The objective of this study was to assess the agreement of posttetanic count including agreement of neuromuscular blockade status (intense block, posttetanic count equal to 0; or deep block, posttetanic count 1 or greater and train-of-four count equal to 0) between acceleromyography and electromyography. Methods:Thirty-six patients, aged 20 to 65 yr, participated in this study. A dose of 0.6 mg/kg rocuronium, with additional dose of 0.3 mg/kg if required, was administered to the patients. The train-of-four and posttetanic counts were monitored in the contralateral arm using electromyography at the first dorsal interosseus or adductor pollicis, and acceleromyography at the adductor pollicis. Posttetanic count measurements were performed at 6-min intervals; the responses were recorded until the train-of-four count reached 1. The authors evaluated the agreement of degree of neuromuscular blockade (intense or deep block) and that of posttetanic count between acceleromyography and electromyography. Results:The authors analyzed 226 pairs of measurements. The percentage agreement indicating the same neuromuscular blockade status (intense or deep block) between acceleromyography and electromyography was 73%. Cohen's kappa coefficient value was 0.26. After excluding data with acceleromyography-posttetanic counts greater than 15, a total of 184 pairs of posttetanic counts were used to evaluate the agreement between the two monitoring methods. For acceleromyography-posttetanic count, 42 (23%) pairs had the same electromyography-posttetanic count, and 93 (50%) pairs had more than the electromyography-posttetanic count. The mean posttetanic count on electromyography was 38% (95% CI, 20 to 51%) lower than that on acceleromyography (P = 0.0002). Conclusions:Acceleromyography frequently counted more twitches than electromyography in posttetanic count monitoring. Acceleromyography- and electromyography-posttetanic counts cannot be used interchangeably to assess the degree of neuromuscular blockade.
DOI
10.1097/ALN.0000000000004466|http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ALN.0000000000004466
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의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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