Severity of cervical spine ligamentous injury correlates with mechanism of injury, not with severity of blunt head trauma

被引:0
|
作者
Albrecht, RM
Malik, S
Kingsley, DD
Hart, B
机构
[1] Univ Oklahoma, Dept Surg, Oklahoma City, OK 73104 USA
[2] Univ New Mexico, Dept Surg, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA
[3] Univ New Mexico, Dept Radiol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Clearance of the cervical spine (CS) in obtunded trauma patients in an intensive care unit is problematic. Patients with no osseous injuries have potential unstable extradural supportive soft tissue injury. Evaluation of the supporting structures involves dynamic fluoroscopy or MRI both of which have inherent risks and convenience issues. Defining which of these patients are at highest risk for severe supportive structure injury may improve resource utilization for CS clearance. The purpose of this study was to evaluate clinical factors that may predict the probability of CS supportive soft tissue injury in patients with traumatic brain injury. Patients who sustained traumatic brain injury with intracranial. pathology, absence of CS osseous injury, and a limited cervical spine MRI within 72 hours of injury were included. Potential clinical predictors included the severity of the traumatic brain injury defined by the Abbreviated Injury Severity Score for the cerebrum and initial Glasgow Coma Scale, the Injury Severity Score (ISS), mechanism of injury, and high versus low-velocity mechanism. Severity of soft tissue/ligament injury was graded by MRI findings. One hundred twenty-five patients met the study criteria; 81 had negative MRI findings and in 44 the MRI study was positive for potentially unstable injuries. High-velocity mechanisms of injury and ISS-not the severity of the traumatic brain injury or initial Glasgow Coma Scale score-were statistically significant predictors of severe CS supportive soft tissue injuries. Obtunded blunt trauma patients who have been involved in high-velocity-mechanism incidents and have high ISS are at greatest risk for extradural supportive soft tissue CS injuries. These patients should either remain in CS immobilization until clinical evaluation can be completed or undergo further evaluation of their supportive soft tissue structures by MRI or fluoroscopic flexion/extension.
引用
收藏
页码:261 / 265
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Blunt cervical spine injury in children
    Tilt, Lindsey
    Babineau, John
    Fenster, Daniel
    Ahmad, Faiz
    Roskind, Cindy G.
    CURRENT OPINION IN PEDIATRICS, 2012, 24 (03) : 301 - 306
  • [32] Evaluation of Blunt Cervical Spine Injury
    Sciubba, Daniel M.
    Petteys, Rory J.
    SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2009, 102 (08) : 823 - 828
  • [33] Accuracy of the new injury severity score in the evaluation of patients with blunt trauma
    Ala, Alireza
    Vahdati, Samad Shams
    Asghari, Afsaneh
    Makouei, Mahsa
    Poureskandari, Masoumeh
    ARCHIVES OF TRAUMA RESEARCH, 2022, 11 (02) : 71 - 73
  • [34] EARLY PHYSIOLOGIC PREDICTORS OF INJURY SEVERITY AND DEATH IN BLUNT MULTIPLE TRAUMA
    SIEGEL, JH
    RIVKIND, AI
    DALAL, S
    GOODARZI, S
    ARCHIVES OF SURGERY, 1990, 125 (04) : 498 - 508
  • [35] IMPACT OF INJURY SEVERITY ON DYNAMIC INFLAMMATION NETWORKS FOLLOWING BLUNT TRAUMA
    Almahmoud, K. W.
    Namas, R. A.
    Abdul-Malak, O. M.
    Zaaqoq, A. M.
    Azhar, N.
    Zamora, R.
    Peitzman, A. B.
    Billiar, T.
    Vodovotz, Y.
    SHOCK, 2014, 41 : 75 - 76
  • [36] IMPACT OF INJURY SEVERITY ON DYNAMIC INFLAMMATION NETWORKS FOLLOWING BLUNT TRAUMA
    Almahmoud, Khalid
    Namas, Rami A.
    Abdul-Malak, Othman
    Zaaqoq, Akram M.
    Zamora, Ruben
    Zuckerbraun, Brian S.
    Sperry, Jason
    Peitzman, Andrew B.
    Billiar, Timothy R.
    Vodovotz, Yoram
    SHOCK, 2015, 44 (02): : 101 - 109
  • [37] Unstable Cervical Spine Secondary to Ligamentous Injury From a Hyperflexion Injury
    Graham, Patrick
    ORTHOPAEDIC NURSING, 2021, 40 (01) : 46 - 48
  • [38] Cervical spine injury is highly dependent on the mechanism of injury following blunt and penetrating assault
    Rhee, Peter
    Kuncir, Eric J.
    Johnson, Laura
    Brown, Carlos
    Velmahos, George
    Martin, Matthew
    Wang, Dennis
    Salim, Ali
    Doucet, Jay
    Kennedy, Susan
    Demetriades, Demetrios
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2006, 61 (05): : 1166 - 1170
  • [39] Seizure Severity Is Correlated With Severity of Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury in Abusive Head Trauma
    Dingman, Andra L.
    Stence, Nicholas, V
    O'Neill, Brent R.
    Sillau, Stefan H.
    Chapman, Kevin E.
    PEDIATRIC NEUROLOGY, 2018, 82 : 29 - 35
  • [40] Validation of a relative head injury severity scale for pediatric trauma
    Cuff, Sara
    DiRusso, Stephen
    Sullivan, Thomas
    Risucci, Donald
    Nealon, Peter
    Haider, Adil
    Slim, Michel
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2007, 63 (01): : 172 - 177