1 / 55

Thoracolumbar Fractures

Thoracolumbar Fractures. Patient Evaluation and Management. Outline. Epidemiology Clinical evaluation ATLS Neuro exam Neurogenic / spinal shock Classification of spinal cord injury Grading system Complete VS incomplete Incomplete cord syndromes Pharmacological treatment. Outline.

liam
Download Presentation

Thoracolumbar Fractures

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thoracolumbar Fractures Patient Evaluation and Management

  2. Outline • Epidemiology • Clinical evaluation • ATLS • Neuro exam • Neurogenic / spinal shock • Classification of spinal cord injury • Grading system • Complete VS incomplete • Incomplete cord syndromes • Pharmacological treatment

  3. Outline • Radiographic Evaluation • Plain Xray • CT • MRI • Mylography • Spinal Stability • Classification of Fractures • Treatment of Specific Injuries

  4. Epidemiology • Prevalence / Incidence • Bimodal Distribution • Cause • Multiple injury

  5. Clinical Evaluation • Trauma / ATLS • ABC / GCS / 2 survey • Spine exam • Red flags • Inspect and palpate entire spine • Be thorough

  6. Clinical Evaluation • Complete Neuro Evaluation • Dermatomal Sensory Testing • Assessment of Lumbar and Sacral motor root function • Reflex Examination

  7. Dermatomal Sensory Testing

  8. Lumbar and Sacral Motor Root Function

  9. Lumbar and Sacral Motor Root Function

  10. Reflex Examination

  11. Spinal Shock • Physiologic disruption of all spinal cord function • Present or not present • Bulbocavernosus Reflex

  12. Bulbocavernosus Reflex

  13. Spinal Shock • No BCR • Flaccid paralysis, hypotonia, areflexia • Hours to days • + BCR • Hyper reflexia, spasticity, clonus

  14. Neurogenic shock • Disruption of descending sympathetic outflow • No sympathetic response and unopposed vagal tone • Cardiovascular instability • treatment

  15. Classification of Spinal Cord injury • Many Grading Systems • Impairment Based • Frankel • ASIA • Yale • Motor Index • Function Based • Modified Barthel Index

  16. Grading of Spinal Cord Injury

  17. Grading of Spinal Cord Injury

  18. Complete VS Incomplete • Complete • No function below level of injury • Absence of sensation and voluntary movement in S4/5 distribution • Incomplete • Preservation of sensation in S4/5 distribution and voluntary control of anal sphincter

  19. Incomplete cord lesion • Determined by anatomic location of tissue injury • Must understand cord anatomy • Predictably pattern based on involvement

  20. Incomplete cord lesion

  21. Incomplete cord lesion

  22. Central Cord syndrome

  23. Anterior Cord Syndrome

  24. Posterior cord syndrome

  25. Brown Sequard Syndrome

  26. Cauda Equina Syndrome • Cord ends L1/2 disc space • Lower motor neuron axons • Perianal anesthesia, sphincter and bladder dysfunction

  27. Pharmacological Treatment • Modify 2 injury cascade • Many drugs • Corticosteroids • Antioxidants • Gangliosides • Opiod antagonists • Ca Channel Blockers • etc

  28. Pharmacological Treatment • NASCIS 3 • Steroids • Controversial study design • Accepted Treatment Protocol • Benefits • Contraindications

  29. Radiographic Evaluation • Trauma Series • Poor historians • Noncontiguous injury • AP / Lat entire spine

  30. Radiographic Evaluation • CT • All cases of suspected injury to posterior elements or posterior vertebral body

  31. Radiographic Evaluation • MRI • Indicated in all cases of neuro deficit? • Both intrinsic and extrinsic cord injuries • Mylogram • Replaced by MRI

  32. Spinal Stability • Holdsworth 1963 • 2 column theory • Post. ligaments

  33. Spinal Stability • Denis 1983 • CT Scan • 3 column theory

  34. Spinal Stability • Categorized major spinal injury into 4 groups: • 1. Compression Fracture • 2. Burst Fractures • 3. Flexion Distraction Injuries • 4. Fracture Dislocations

  35. Compression Fracture • Failure of anterior column • Stable: • Tlso, hyperextension bracing • Unstable (>50% height, >30% kyphosis, multi level) • Posterior instrumented fusion vs non OR • Progressive deformity

  36. Burst Fracture • Failure of anterior and middle column • Axial compression • +/- failure of posterior column • Compression or tensile force • Most common at T/L junction

  37. Burst Fracture • Neuro intact • <20-30 kyphosis, <45-50 canal compromise • >20-30 kyphosis, >45-50 canal compromise • Neuro compromised

  38. Decompression??? • Complete • Early stabilization • Neuro outcome not changed by decompression • Incomplete • Stabilization and decompression beneficial (no controversy) • How to do it (controversial)

  39. Decompression • Posterior • Indirect (distraction and ligamentotaxis) • Direct (transpedicle or posterolateral) • Anterior • Large / midline / incomplete • > 2 weeks since injury • Following posterior decompression • Partial / complete corpectomy

  40. Flexion Distraction Injury • Bone or soft tissue?

  41. Fracture Dislocation • High energy • Most have neuro deficit • Goal: • Stabilization for early mobilization • Incomplete deficit??

  42. Gun Shot Wounds • Where is the bullet? • Complete / incomplete? • Progressive deficit? • Bowel injury?

  43. THE END!!!

  44. Treatment Overview

More Related