Background & objective: The use of intraoperative neurophysiologic monitoring (IOM) has increased over the past two decades for the detection and prevention of iatrogenic neurologic injuries. Motor evoked potentials (MEP) are extremely sensitive to changes in physiological variables and inhalational agents reduce MEPs in a dose dependent manner. So IV anesthetics (propofol or ketamine) and opioids (fentanyl or remifentanil), are frequently used in spinal surgeries under MEPs monitoring. We compared the effects of propofol and fentanyl to those of ketamine, dexmedetomidine, and fentanyl in terms of minimizing their effects on MEP amplitude and hemodynamic stability during surgery Methodology: This double blind, randomized, prospective study was conducted on 46 children, who were randomly allocated into 2 groups Ketamine–dexmedetomidine group: (n = 23) Maintenance throughout the procedure, by infusing Dexmedetomidine (0.4 -0.6 μg/.kg /.hr) ketamine, (1 -2m/.kg/.hr.) and giving bolus of fentanyl, (1-2μg/.kg/ ). Propofol-group:(n = 23) Maintenance throughout the procedure, By infusing propofol (100 ug L/kg/min) and giving bolus of fentanyl, (1-2μg/.kg/ ), with keeping mean arterial blood pressure changes within 25% of the baseline in both groups. Results: Right and left quadriceps muscle measurements were insignificantly different between both groups at base line and were significantly higher in Group KD than Group P at skin incision, surgical manipulation and surgical closure. Right and left adductor hallucis muscle measurements were insignificantly different between both groups at base line and were significantly higher in Group KD than Group P at 5 mins, 10 mins, 15 mins, skin incision, surgical manipulation and surgical closure (P value <0.001). Intraoperative fentanyl consumption was significantly lower in Group KD than Group P. Conclusion: The combination of dexmedetomidine and ketamine infusion is efficacious, safe, and has minimal effect on evoked potentials compared with the propofol-based TIVA group during spine pediatrics surgery. In addition, this combination increases the reliability and accuracy of MEP monitoring with hemodynamic stability and adequate post-operative pain relief. Using dexmedetomidine and ketamine infusions during pediatric spine surgery might successfully replace the typical propofol-based TIVA, although more studies are required . Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov registration number NCT05591001. Keywords: Motor evoked potential, dexmedetomidine, ketamine, propofol. Citation: Saleh AH, Hammad SH, Hassan PF. Effect of propofol infusion vs ketamine plus dexmedetomidine infusion on the amplitude of motor evoked potential in pediatric patients undergoing tethered spinal cord surgeries; a randomized, double blind controlled study. Anaesth. pain intensive care 2024;28(4):692−699; DOI: 10.35975/apic.v28i4.2218 Received: May 08, 2023; Reviewed: February 02, 2024; Accepted: July 03, 2924