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Spine and Spinal Cord Trauma. Objectives. Anatomy/physiology Evaluate a patient with spinal injury Identify common spinal injuries and Xray features Appropriately manage the spinal-injured patient Determine appropriate disposition. Suspected Spinal Injury. High speed crash Unconscious
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Objectives • Anatomy/physiology • Evaluate a patient with spinal injury • Identify common spinal injuries and Xray features • Appropriately manage the spinal-injured patient • Determine appropriate disposition
Suspected Spinal Injury • High speed crash • Unconscious • Multiple injuries • Neurologic deficit • Spinal pain/tenderness
Spinal injury • 5% worsen neurologically at hospital • Protection is a priority • Detection is a secondary priority • Spinal evaluation complicated by TBI • Remove spine boards ASAP
Cord Injury Severity • Complete = no motor function or sensory function below the injury level • Incomplete = any preservation of function • Sacral sparing may be the only preservation of function
Sensory Examination • Levels vs sensation
Motor Examination • Table outlining levels
Neurogenic Shock • Hypotension associated with cervical/high thoracic spine injury • Bradycardia • Tx: fluid, atropine, pressors
Spinal Shock • Neurologic, not hemodynamic phenomenon • Occurs shortly after cord injury • Flaccidity • Loss of reflexes
Effects on other organ systems • Inadequate ventilation • Compromised abdominal evaluation • Occult compartment syndrome
Classification of Injuries: Levels of injury Clinical exam Most caudal Normal bilaterally Motor/sensory function Bony = site of vertebral damage
Incomplete Any sensation Position sense Voluntary movement in lower extremity Sacral sparing Complete No motor/sensory function No sacral sparing May have reflexes Classification
Central Anterior Brown-sequard Anatomy diagram Spinal Cord Syndromes
Classifications: morphology • Fracture or fracture dislocation • SCIWORA • Penetrating
Classification: morphology • Unstable if: • Xray evidence of injury • Neurologic injury • Severe pain on spine movement or palpation
A A B B C C D S Normal C spine Xray Xray Guidelines
C spine Xrays • Cross table lateral detects 85% • Additional 2 views excludes most fractures • May also require: • Swimmer’s • CT • Flex/ex • MRI
Cspine Xrays • 10% have a second fracture • Look for second fracture! • One fracture mandates full spine films
Adequacy Alignment Bones Cartilage Contours Disc space Soft tissue Thoracolumbar spine Xray Xray Guidelines
Screening for Spinal Injury • Algorithim • Paraplegia/quadraplegia • Presumed spinal instability • Identify bony fracture-subluxation • Consult neurosurgery or orthopedics
Screening for Spinal Injury • Alert, sober neurologically normal patient: • No neck pain or tenderness • No distracting injury • No pain with voluntary movement • No further Xrays required
Screening for spinal injury • Alert, sober, neurologically normal patient • Neck or spin pain or tenderness to palpation or voluntary movement • After removal of c-collar? • If yes to any question • Protect cspine • Obtain necessary Xray exams
Screening for spinal injury • Altered LOC • Complete spine films • Plain films • CT prn
Screening for Spinal Injury • Radiographic • Normal Xray • Clinical • Normal neurologic exam and • Absence of spinal pain/tenderness • Caution! • Drugs, alcohol, distracting injuries
Immobilization Entire patient Propper padding Maintain until cleared Avoid prolonged use of backboard Decubitus ulcer Management
Medical Management • Ensure A/B • Maintain BP • Atropine prn • Methylprednisolone
Medical Management • Intravenous fluids • Treat hypovolemia first • Consider neurogenic shock • Insert foley
Medical Management • Steroids • Methylpred doses
Medical Management • Transfer • Unstable fractures • Neurologic deficit • Avoid delay • Proper immobilization • Respiratory support as needed
Summary • Treat life-threatening injuries first (ABCD) • Immobilization • Appropriate Xrays • Document examination • Consultation • Transfer