Butler McDermott (heightcereal88)
Patients with a baseline ODI score of <20, 20-40, and >40 had an MCID of 2.24, 11.35, and 26.57, respectively. Similarly, patients with a baseline COMI score of <2.75, 2.8-5.4, and >5.4 had an MCID of 0.59, 1.38, and 3.67 respectively. The overall MCID thresholds for deterioration and improvement were 0.27 and 2.62 for COMI, 2.23 and 14.31 for ODI, and 0.01 and 0.71 for 22-item Scoliosis Research Society Outcomes questionnaire, respectively. The results from the present study have demonstrated that MCIDs change in accordance with the baseline scores and direction of change but not by age or gender. The MCID, in its current state, should be considered a concept rather than a constant. The results from the present study have demonstrated that MCIDs change in accordance with the baseline scores and direction of change but not by age or gender. The MCID, in its current state, should be considered a concept rather than a constant. Stimulating electrodes for lower extremity motor-evoked potential (LE-MEP) monitoring with transcortical stimulation are usually placed on the medial side of motor cortex convexity, which is not lower extremity but lumbar motor area. Lumbar MEP may be elicited with lower stimulation intensity than LE-MEP through this location, and it is useful to monitor lower extremity motor function intraoperatively. Intraoperative lumbar and LE-MEP monitoring with transcortical stimulation during surgery of 12 patients with lesions involving the motor cortex from January 2012 to February 2019 at Shinshu University Hospital were reviewed retrospectively. Stimulations were delivered by a train of 5 pulses of anodal constant current stimulation. Fatostatin was determined by motor cortex mapping. Recording needle electrodes were placed on bilateral lumbar muscles and contralateral leg muscles. The threshold-level stimulation method was used for MEP monitoring. The thresholds, monitoring result, and postoperative motor function of lumbar and lower extremities were compared. The mean baseline thresholds were 19.9 ± 8.9 mA for lumbar MEP and 26.5 ± 11.5 mA for LE-MEP (P= 0.02). Patterns of intraoperative monitoring changes were the same between lumbar and LE-MEP monitoring. Lumbar MEP was stimulated with lower stimulation intensity than the LE-MEP with the same intraoperative pattern of waveform changes in 12 patients. Lumbar MEP monitoring may be useful for preserving the corticospinal tract of lower extremities intraoperatively. Lumbar MEP was stimulated with lower stimulation intensity than the LE-MEP with the same intraoperative pattern of waveform changes in 12 patients. Lumbar MEP monitoring may be useful for preserving the corticospinal tract of lower extremities intraoperatively.Contemporary neuroscientific accounts suggest that ventral anterior temporal lobe (ATL) acts as a bilateral heteromodal semantic hub, which is particularly critical for the specific-level knowledge needed to recognise unique entities, such as familiar landmarks and faces. There may also be graded functional differences between left and right ATL, relating to effects of modality (linguistic versus non-linguistic) and category (e.g., knowledge of people and places). Individual differences in intrinsic connectivity from left and right ATL might be associated with variation in semantic categorisation performance across these categories and modalities. We recorded resting-state fMRI in 74 individuals and, in a separate session, examined semantic categorisation. People with greater connectivity between left and right ATL were more efficient at categorising landmarks (e.g., Eiffel Tower), especially when these were presented visually. In addition, participants who showed stronger connectivity from right than left ATL to medial occipital cortex showed more efficient semantic categorisation of landmarks regardless of modality of presentation. #link# These results can be int