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Objectives. AnatomyStatsClinicalImagingSummary. Anatomy 1. Number of neurons in human spinal cord = 13,500,000 Length of human spinal cord = 45 cm (male); 43 cm (female) Length of human vertebral column = 70 cm Length of cat spinal cord = 34 cm Length of rabbit spinal cord = 18 cmWeight of hum
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1. Spinal Injury Dr Adrian Burger
Senior Registrar
Division of Emergency Medicine
UCT/US
25 May 2007
2. Objectives Anatomy
Stats
Clinical
Imaging
Summary
3. Anatomy 1 Number of neurons in human spinal cord = 13,500,000Length of human spinal cord = 45 cm (male); 43 cm (female)Length of human vertebral column = 70 cm Length of cat spinal cord = 34 cmLength of rabbit spinal cord = 18 cm
Weight of human spinal cord = 35 gm Weight of rabbit spinal cord = 4 gmWeight of rat spinal cord (400 gm body weight) = 0.7 gm
Maximal Circumference of cervical enlargement = 38 mmMaximal Circumference of lumbar enlargement = 35 mm
Pairs of Spinal Nerves = 31Number of Spinal Cord segments = 318 cervical segments
12 thoracic segments5 lumbar segments5 sacral segments1 coccygeal segment
4. Anatomy 2
5. Consequences Depends on
Complete/Incomplete
Level
Stabilised
Initial Management
6. Early Consequences Respiratory – apnoea,
hypoventilation
Cardiac - neurogenic
shock triad
- autonomic
dysreflexia
- hypotension
C3-C5
Intercostals
T1 –T4
>T6
7. Later consequences Bowel reflex or non-reflex dysfunction
Bladder retention
Bed sores
Contractions
8. Causes of death Dysrhythmias, apnoea
Pneumonia
VTE
Sepsis
CHD
9. Neurology Most frequent level of injury is C5,
then C4, C6, T12, C7, L1
Overall about half are cervical injuries
Incomplete quadraplegia (34.3%)
Complete quadraplegia (22.1%)
Complete paraplegia (25.1%)
Incomplete paraplegia (17.5%)
10. Incomplete lesions Anterior cord syndrome
Corticospinal and spinothalamic pathways
Loss of motor, pain and temperature below the level of the injury
Preservation of position and vibration
Key is potential reversibility of a haematoma or fragment
Central cord syndrome
Injury to the central portion of the spinal cord
Greater involvement of upper extremities than lower
Bowel or bladder control usually is preserved
Hyperextension injury of cervical spine with a narrow cord space
Can occur without fracture or ligamentous disruption
11. Incomplete lesions 2 Brown-Séquard syndrome
Hemisection of the spinal cord, usually penetrating
trauma
Contralateral loss of pain and temperature
Ipsilateral loss of motor and posterior column functions
Cauda equina syndrome
Injury to the lumbar, sacral, and coccygeal nerve roots
Motor and sensory loss in the lower extremities
Bowel and bladder dysfunction
Saddle anaesthesia
12. Sacral Sparing & Spinal Shock Preservation of any function of the sacral roots, such as toe movement or perianal sensation
Implies the chance of functional neurologic recovery is good
Spinal shock is a temporary concussive-like condition in which cord-mediated reflexes, such as the anal wink, are absent
Spinal shock also may result in bradycardia and hypotension. The extent of cord injury-and prognosis-cannot be determined until these reflexes return
13. Stats UK
14. Stats USA Vehicular crashes (50.4%)
Falls (23.8%)
Violence, primarily gunshot wounds (11.2%)
Sports (9.0%)
Other (5.6%)
15. General Stats Average age 16-30
Males 80%
Life expectancy of someone with a SCI in Africa is 2-3 years
60 % of admitted patients have neurological deficits
After the initial care require rehabilitation
Average hospital stay for rehab of a paraplegic patient is 4 months, for quadriplegics 6 months
Estimated that 2 000 SPINAL INJURIES are treated per annum NATIONALLY in the public sector ie, 1:20 000 of the population
16. Minister of Transport Jeff Radebe, (MP)at the 2006 Poor driver behaviour and attitude
95 % of crashes follow a traffic violation
Our statistics reflect that 7 000 people involved in crashes are left permanently disabled every year.
At least 650 of these have SCI
17. South Africa MRC 1999
18. Cape Metropole 2000
19. Trauma Injuries, Red Cross Children's Hospital1 April 1999 - 31 March 2000 (12 months)
MVA Pedestrian745 Passenger - Restrained 18 Passenger - Unrestrained 106 Passenger - Bakkie/Minibus77 Cycle151 Motor Cycle 2 Other - Boat, Train, Plane, Horse25
Total MVA 1125 (16%)
Assault Blunt 126 Sharp25 Rape/Sexual 38 Human Bite 3 Other 33 Total Assault 2253
Burns Flame 117 Fluid 497 Heat Contact 37 Electrical 13 Chemical 21 Explosion 10 Other 11 Total -706
Falls Off Ben 283 Stairs115 Attendants Arms 68 Playground Equipment 252 Mobiles93 Other Heights 613 Other Level 1071
Total - Falls 2495 (35%)
Struck by/against objects 688 Caught between objects 212 Sharp Instruments 250 Firearms42 Machinery9 Dogbite90 Other bite 7
Immersion/drowning Suffocation1 Food foreign body 33 Other foreign body 351 Other cause549 Unknown290 Total 7075
20. X Ray or not? NEXUS
No midline cervical tenderness
No focal neurologic deficit
Normal alertness
No intoxication
No painful distracting injury
CCS
Any high-risk factor?(i.e., age > 65, severe mechanism, or focal neurologic signs)?
Can the patient be assessed safely for range of motion (simple mechanism, sitting position in the ED, ambulatory at any time, delayed onset of neck pain, or absence of midline cervical spine tenderness)?
Can the patient actively rotate the neck 45 degrees to the left and the right?
21. Children Not validated in either study
Small numbers of children
Can’t assess under 2 years
Rare injury in children
22. High risk PMH Elderly
Rheumatoid arthritis
Down's syndrome
Osteoporosis
Metastatic cancer
23. Low Risk Simple rear end
Sitting in ED
Ambulatory at any time
Delayed onset of neck pain
24. Which X Rays? 3 View (LAT, AP, ODONTOID) in adults
2 View in children, ? 1 View
Sensitivity 90%
Add CT 99.9% sensitive
10% non-contiguous # incidence
25. Adjuvants Swimmers view
CT scan
MRI
Flexion/Extension views
26. AP and LAT
27. AP & Odontoid
29. Measurements On Lateral view
Soft Tissue
ADI
Swischuck’s Line
30. Mechanism of Injury Flexion type
31. Mechanisms of Injury Rotation/Flexion Lateral Flexion
32. Other mechanisms Axial Load Hyperextension
33. C5 on C6
34. L1 Compression Fracture
35. Lumbar Vertebral Body #
36. So why do we take “spinal precautions”? Never can tell…
Preserve intact cord
Cost
37. Log Roll Collar
38. It is AMUST to Suspect SCI! A = Airway
B = Breathing
C = Circulation
D = Disability
E = Exposure
A = Altered mental state. Check for drugs or alcohol.
M = Mechanism. Does the potential for injury exist?
U = Underlying conditions. Are high risk factors for fractures present?
S = Symptoms. Is pain, paresthesia, or neurologic compromise part of the picture?
T = Timing. When did the symptoms begin in relation to the event?
39. Acute Treatment First treat life threatening conditions
Then do no harm
Spinal immobilise – 5% deteriorate
A-B-C-D-E
A-M-U-S-T
Transport by air
40. Acute Medications O2
RSI – beware scoline
Crystalloids – judiciously
Atropine, pacemaker
Inotropes
Ganglioside GM-1, naloxone, CCB & glutamate receptor antagonists
And……..
41. Steroids? Definitely not for penetrating trauma!
Blunt trauma?
1975 First National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Study (NASCIS) established
Followed by NASCIS 2 and NASCIS 3, which was completed in 1998
Bottom line……
42. Steroids Everyone wants to try and get just some benefit…
So it’s not advocated as a standard of care but it is an option <8 hours
Dosage 30mg/kg over 15 min + 5.4mg/kg/hour for 24 or 48 hours
43. Surgery Some unclear roles
Some clear roles
anterior cord syndrome
thoracolumbar spine fracture/dislocation
44. Summary Suspect SCI and look for it
Spinal precautions in vast majority
Use and familiarize decision rules
Use your common sense
Examine your patient
Ask for help
45. References www.drivinghome.co.uk/html/cj_injury.shtml
http://www.worldortho.com/
http://www.playersfund.org.za/spineline/spineline.asp
http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic553.htm
http://www.doh.gov.za/mts/reports/spinal.html
http://quad.stormnet.co.za/info.htm
http://www.transport.gov.za/comm-centre/sp/2006/sp0907.html
American Academy of Emergency Medicine: http://www.aaem.org/positionstatements/steroidsinacuteinjury.shtml
American College of Surgeons: Advanced Trauma Life Support, 7th ed. Chicago, 2004
Canadian & American Spinal Research Organization
Markovchick & Pons: Emergency Medicine Secrets 4E