Acute isovolemic anemia does not impair peripheral or central nerve conduction
- PMID: 12960537
- DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200309000-00008
Acute isovolemic anemia does not impair peripheral or central nerve conduction
Abstract
Background: Previous studies have found subtle slowing of responses in tests of addition and digit-symbol substitution during acute severe isovolemic anemia to a hemoglobin concentration of 5 g/dl in healthy unmedicated humans. In this study, the authors tested the hypothesis that such changes relate to the slowing of afferent neural traffic.
Methods: The median nerve was stimulated at the wrist in seven healthy unmedicated volunteers before and after induction of acute isovolemic anemia to a nadir hemoglobin concentration of 5.1 +/- 0.3 g/dl (mean +/- SD). Times for neural impulses to travel from the stimulus site to the brachial plexus, cervical spinal cord, and cerebral cortex were measured using somatosensory evoked potentials. Tests were repeated during acute anemia with the subject breathing oxygen. As a control for time and intrasubject variation, the testing was repeated on a separate day when anemia was not produced at times equivalent to those on the experimental day.
Results: Induced acute severe isovolemic anemia decreased nerve conduction latencies from the wrist to the contralateral cerebral cortex (i.e., to the N20 peak) by 2.3 +/- 1.6% compared with values at a mean hemoglobin concentration of 12.7 g/dl (P < 0.01). These decreased latencies were due solely to an increased peripheral conduction velocity, from the wrist to the brachial plexus (P < 0.05), and were not altered when subjects breathed oxygen (P > 0.05). Conduction velocity from the brachial plexus or cervical spinal cord to the cerebral cortex did not change with acute anemia (P > 0.05). Latencies did not differ on the control day among the times of testing (all P > 0.05), nor did they differ at baseline between the control and experimental days (all P > 0.05).
Conclusion: Somatosensory evoked potential latencies were not increased by acute severe isovolemic anemia, making it unlikely that the afferent portion of the neural system is responsible for slowing of cognitive responses previously observed during acute anemia. Because severe isovolemic anemia did not increase somatosensory evoked potential latencies, etiologies other than anemia should be sought if latencies are increased during intraoperative monitoring.
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