Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1....

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Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment

Transcript of Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1....

Page 1: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Emergency Spinal

Radiological Assessment

Page 2: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

spine injury: location

type neurologic sequelae

1. cervical . . . . . . brainstem, cord or root

2. thoracic . . . . . cord or root

3. lumbar . . . . . . conus or root

C

T

L

Page 3: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

cord injury: deficit patterns

1. normal (no neurologic injury)

2. incomplete deficit (syndromes)

a. central cordb. anterior cord c. Brown-Sequardd. posterior corde. conus/epiconus

3. complete functional transection

Page 4: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

spine injury: types

1. muscular/ligamentous

a. contusionsb. strainsc. sprainsd. complete ligamentous disruption

2. fractures

+ / - dislocation

stability: 1. stable 2. unstable

Page 5: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

spinal Imaging after trauma - indications

1. clinical indications

a. spine-region pain b. neurologic deficit

(1) radicular(2) cord

c. severe multisystem injuries d. altered mental status

2. clinical rationale

a. prevent cord, root injury (neurologic stability) b. prevent incapacitating deformity and pain

(mechanical instability)

Page 6: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Which patients need imaging of the cervical spine?

Case 1: mild/moderate trauma patient

– no loss of consciousness– normal mental status (and not intoxicated)– no neck pain or tenderness – no neurologic deficit

no imaging needed

Page 7: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Which patients need imaging of the cervical spine?

Case 2: mild/moderate trauma patient

– altered mental status (patient is obtunded and/or intoxicated)

– neck pain or tenderness – neurologic symptoms or deficit

Page 8: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Which patients need imaging of the cervical spine?

Case 3: severe multi-system trauma patient

imaging needed

Page 9: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

spinal Imaging after trauma – imaging tools

1. bony - fractures/dislocations

a. X-rays – AP, lateral, open-mouth odontoid b. CT scan

2. ligamentous

a. MRI scan b. flexion – extension lateral x-ray

3. disk injury

a. MRI scan b. CT/myelogram

Page 10: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

cervical: 7 lordotic curve

thoracic: 12kyphotic curve

lumbar: 5lordotic curve

Page 11: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

spine injury: alignment

1. pre-vertebral fascia

2. anterior marginal line

3. posterior marginal line

4. spino-laminar line

5. posterior spinous line

A. vertebral body width

B. spinal canal diameter

54

32

1

Page 12: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

ligamentous injury without fracture

instability possible even with normal CT; early MRI helpfulstabilize until neck pain resolves, assess competence of

ligaments with flexion/extension X-rays or MRI

Page 13: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Bilateral facet fracture/dislocation:“jumped” or locked facets

Page 14: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

C1 - Jefferson fracture

axial loadingoften associated with

C2 fracturesassess transverse ligament

Page 15: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

type I

type II

type III

C2 - odontoid fractures/subluxations

Page 16: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

C2 - Hangman’s fracture

hyperextension/axial loading

bilateral C2 pars interarticularis fracture

unstable when:a. >3.5 mm subluxation of

C2 on C3b. >11 degrees angulation

Page 17: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Atlantoaxial subluxation

• Atlantodental interval (ADI)

• Left: Normal ADI ≤ 3 mm

• Right: C1-2 subluxation

Page 18: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Denis 3-column model - thoracolumbar spine

one-column injury usually stable

two-column injury usually unstable

three-column injury unstable

Page 19: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Class A: vertebral body compression

compression fractureAnterior column failureMiddle and posterior columns intactUnstable if >50% compression or

>20 degrees angulation

burst fractureAnterior and middle column failureRetropulsion of bone into canalOften have neurologic deficitUnstable

Page 20: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Burst fracture

Page 21: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Class B: distraction (+ flexion/extension)

Types Flexion/distraction (Chance, seat belt injury)Hyperextension

Three-column injury: unstable

Page 22: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

flexion/distractionposterior ligamentous injury

Page 23: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

Class C: three-column injury with rotation

fracture-dislocationshear injury

unstable

neurologic deficit

Page 24: Emergency Spinal Radiological Assessment. spine injury: location type neurologic sequelae 1. cervical...... brainstem, cord or root 2. thoracic..... cord.

fracture-dislocation