Because of the suppressant effects of anesthetic drugs and muscle relaxants on motor responses elicited by either magnetic or electrical transcranial stimulation, intraoperative monitoring of the motor system, and especially monitoring of lower limb function, presents many difficulties. The upper part of the spinal cord was stimulated in 14 anesthetized and relaxed dogs with a cathode attached to the intratracheal tube and an anode fixed above the upper cervical spinous processes. Action potentials evoked by single and serial stimuli were recorded from the exposed right femoral nerve and quadriceps muscle Averaging was necessary for serial stimulations. Reproducible early and late responses to both single and serial stimulations were recorded during regular anesthesia. The origin of the different responses is discussed. Transtracheal stimulation of the spinal cord is easy to perform and the responses recorded from the peripheral nerve or limb muscle are well reproducible in regular anesthesia. The method seems to be appropriate for intraoperative monitoring of the thoracolumbar spine.

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