In 94 patients with head injuries, conduction between the lower brainstem and the cerebral cortex was studied by recording evoked potentials from the scalp and neck following stimulation of the median nerves. A conduction time 3 SD or more above the normal mean (5.74 +/- 0.46 msec) or the absence of an evoked potential over one or both hemispheres was considered abnormal. During successive periods in the first 35 days after injury, the evoked potentials correlated with the outcome (classified as good or not good) in 75 to 84% of patients. Within 3 1/2 days the outcome was correctly predicted in 38 of 49 patients (78%). Six of the 7 surviving patients with persistent asymmetries of the cerebral evoked potentials remained hemiplegic. Serial studies over one year showed that both conduction time and amplitude recovered exponentially over many months, but differences persisted between the patients who made a good recovery and those who remained disabled.
Eleven patients with severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome, which was fully reversed by treatment with nasal continuous positive airways pressure, underwent uvulopalatopharyngoplasty. All patients were followed for at least 12 months after surgery. One patient with large tonsils was cured. Of the remaining 10 patients, two showed minimal objective improvement at 12 months and the rest were unchanged. Four patients subsequently developed cardiac failure due to obstructive sleep apnoea. Thus uvulopalatopharyngoplasty was not effective in these patients with severe idiopathic obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome.
Somatosensory conduction time between the dorsal column nuclei and the cerebral cortex may be measured following median nerve stimulation by recording evoked potentials from both scalp and neck. Central conduction times were significantly increased relative to normal (5.6 +/ 0.5 msec) in 11 of 24 comatose patients. Results within 10 and 35 days of onset of coma were correlated with the final clinical outcome. Conduction times were independent of serum phenobarbital (0 to 630 mumol per liter) and of central body temperature (35.0 to 38.5 degrees C). Serial studies in coma demonstrated (1) short-term increases during temporary metabolic disorders, and (2) sustained increases with gradual recovery over many months, particularly after head injury.
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