The use of curare during anesthesia to prevent iatrogenic muscle damage caused by lumbar spinal surgery through a posterior approach
- PMID: 17304128
- DOI: 10.1097/01.brs.0000255077.54766.59
The use of curare during anesthesia to prevent iatrogenic muscle damage caused by lumbar spinal surgery through a posterior approach
Abstract
Study design: Prospective randomized study of patients undergoing lumbar arthrodesis.
Objectives: To evaluate the use of curare during anesthesia to limit muscle lesions caused by surgery.
Summary of background data: It has been shown that lumbar spine surgery through a posterior approach can induce iatrogenic lesions in the erector spinae. The prevention of these lesions by intraoperative cholinergic blockade has never been evaluated.
Methods: Twenty patients scheduled to undergo pedicle-screw enhanced L4-L5 arthrodesis were enrolled in this study. The average age was 48.9 years. Ten patients received curare during anesthesia and 10 patients did not. Postoperative pain was assessed using a visual analog scale (VAS) and the consumption of morphine by patient-controlled analgesia during the first 24 hours. Intramuscular pressure (IMP) in the multifidus was monitored during the intervention. A biopsy of the multifidus muscle was performed at the end of the intervention for histologic study. Serum activity of the MM iso-enzyme of the creatine phosphokinase (CPK-MM) was measured 24 hours after surgery.
Results: The average consumption of morphine and the mean value of the VAS at 24 hours were not statistically different between these 2 groups. The use of a self-retaining retractor during lumbar surgery resulted in a substantial increase in IMP, resulting in histologic muscle lesions and an increase in serum CPK-MM activity. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups of patients.
Conclusions: The use of curare during anesthesia did not limit the muscle damage caused by surgery.
Comment in
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Misuse of the term "Curare".Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2007 Nov 15;32(24):2786. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e31815a7632. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2007. PMID: 18007261 No abstract available.
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