CERVICAL-SPINE TRAUMA - HOW MUCH MORE DO WE LEARN BY ROUTINELY USING HELICAL CT

Citation
Db. Nunez et al., CERVICAL-SPINE TRAUMA - HOW MUCH MORE DO WE LEARN BY ROUTINELY USING HELICAL CT, Radiographics, 16(6), 1996, pp. 1307-1318
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Radiology,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Journal title
ISSN journal
02715333
Volume
16
Issue
6
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1307 - 1318
Database
ISI
SICI code
0271-5333(1996)16:6<1307:CT-HMM>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
Assessment of suspected cervical spine injuries remains a major debate in trauma care. It is generally accepted that many fractures are miss ed or incompletely shown at radiography, mainly because of suboptimal studies obtained in obtunded, uncooperative trauma victims. In a serie s of 88 severely traumatized patients, the authors retrospectively det ermined the type, distribution, and significance of such missed lesion s. This assessment was made by comparing radiographs and helical compu ted tomographic (CT) scans of the cervical spine and reviewing medical records in these cases, Of the 88 patients, 32 patients had cervical spine fractures (n = 50) that were not revealed or were incompletely d emonstrated at radiography. Most missed fractures occurred at the C-1 to C-2 and C-6 to C-7 levels, and most involved the transverse process es and the posterolateral elements of the vertebrae. One-third of the patients with missed fractures had either clinically significant or un stable injuries, as determined on the basis of mechanistic or imaging criteria. Helical CT can depict significant fractures not shown by pla in radiography and should be added routinely to the initial screening for cervical spine fractures in polytrauma victims.