16,748 results on '"Spinal Injuries"'
Search Results
2. Does Prehabilitation Improve Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Complex Spine Fusion Surgery?
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- 2024
3. The Use of Dantrolene to Improve Analgesia in Posterior Lumbar Surgery
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Richard J. Pollard, Director, Neurosurgical Anesthesia Fellowship
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- 2024
4. Wound Closure Techniques in Primary Spine Surgery
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Arjun S. Sebastian, Principal Investigator
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- 2024
5. Locomotor Training With Testosterone to Promote Bone and Muscle Health After Spinal Cord Injury
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North Florida/South Georgia Veterans Health System, Brooks Rehabilitation, University of Florida, and Joshua Yarrow, Research Health Scientist
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- 2024
6. Tranexamic Acid to Reduce Blood Loss in Spine Trauma Surgery
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Ronald A. Lehman, Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery
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- 2024
7. Transcutaneous Auricular Neurostimulation After Lumbar Fusion Surgery
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Alex Valadka, Professor
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- 2024
8. Investigating Association Between Spine, Scapular, Shoulder and Core in Swimmers
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Poyraz Tuncer, Physiotherapist
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- 2024
9. Pedicle Screw Malposition in Spine Arthrodesis Surgeries With O-ARM-guided Navigation (NoHARM)
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Carlos Eduardo Batista de Lima, MD, PhD, Associate Professor, MD, PhD
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- 2024
10. In Vivo Quantification of Cervical Collar Efficacy
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- 2024
11. Short Term Outcomes of Fracture Odontoid Management
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Ahmed Shaif Al-Huthaifi, Doctor
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- 2024
12. Development and Testing of a Pediatric Cervical Spine Injury Risk Assessment Tool (C-Spine)
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Julie Leonard, Principal Investigator
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- 2024
13. Prehospital use of spinal precautions by emergency medical services in children and adolescents.
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Phillips, Natalie, Eapen, Nitaa, Wilson, Catherine L, Nehme, Ziad, and Babl, Franz E
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PEDIATRIC emergency services , *TRAFFIC accidents , *ACCIDENTAL falls , *SPORTS injuries , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *SPINAL injuries - Abstract
Objectives Methods Results Conclusions Limited evidence exists to guide the management of children with possible spinal injuries in the prehospital setting. As a first step to address this, we set out to describe the epidemiology and management of children <18 years presenting with possible cervical spinal injuries to EMS in Victoria, Australia.Retrospective case record review of all children with concerns of head or neck trauma and/or documented cervical spine collar use presenting to the statewide Ambulance Victoria (AV) EMS service, Victoria, Australia, between 1 July 2019 and 30 June 2020. Demographic, clinical features, mechanism of injury and spinal immobilisation practices were extracted.2100 children were included; 61% were male and the median age was 13 years (interquartile range: 9–15). Over half of the children were transported to suburban (32.2%) and rural/regional (22.9%) EDs, with 37.5% taken to designated trauma centres. The most common mechanisms of injury were sports/activity, motor vehicle accidents and falls in 35.4%, 27.9% and 26.3%, respectively. Spinal precaution use was recorded in 93.7% of cases; cervical collar use was the most common procedure recorded (87.1%). Younger age groups were less likely to have spinal precautions initiated; 51% of children aged 0–3 years, compared to 96.3% of children aged 12 and older (odds ratio = 23.8; 95% confidence interval = 14.5–37; P < 0.001).Prehospital spinal precautions were initiated commonly in children, with use increasing with age, and most were transported to suburban, regional and rural hospitals, not trauma centres. These data will inform the integration of emerging paediatric‐specific evidence into prehospital guidelines to risk stratify children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Venous Thromboembolism Prevention in Rehabilitation.
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Geerts, William H., Jeong, Eric, Robinson, Lawrence R., and Khosravani, Houman
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THROMBOEMBOLISM risk factors , *RISK assessment , *ANTICOAGULANTS , *PATIENT education , *AMPUTATION , *SPINAL injuries , *WOUNDS & injuries , *PATIENTS , *LOW-molecular-weight heparin , *NEUROMUSCULAR diseases , *BURNS & scalds , *VEINS , *ASPIRIN , *ORAL drug administration , *MOVEMENT disorders , *REHABILITATION centers , *ENOXAPARIN , *ORTHOPEDIC surgery , *MEDICAL rehabilitation , *THROMBOEMBOLISM , *COMPRESSION therapy , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *BRAIN injuries , *TUMORS , *QUALITY assurance , *COMORBIDITY , *COVID-19 , *HEALTH care teams ,THROMBOEMBOLISM prevention - Abstract
Venous thromboembolism is a frequent complication of acute hospital care, and this extends to inpatient rehabilitation. The timely use of appropriate thromboprophylaxis in patients who are at risk is a strong, evidence-based patient safety priority that has reduced clinically important venous thromboembolism, associated mortality and costs of care. While there has been extensive research on optimal approaches to venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in acute care, there is a paucity of high-quality evidence specific to patients in the rehabilitation setting, and there are no clinical practice guidelines that make recommendations for (or against) thromboprophylaxis across the broad spectrum of rehabilitation patients. Herein, we provide an evidence-informed review of the topic with practice suggestions. We conducted a series of literature searches to assess the risks of venous thromboembolism and its prevention related to inpatient rehabilitation as well as in major rehabilitation subgroups. Mobilization alone does not eliminate the risk of venous thromboembolism after another thrombotic insult. Low molecular weight heparins and direct oral anticoagulants are the principal current modalities of thromboprophylaxis. Based on the literature, we make suggestions for venous thromboembolism prevention and include an approach for consideration by rehabilitation units that can be aligned with local practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Contemporary Outcomes and Patterns of Injury Associated With Parachuting Accidents.
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Elsayed, Ramsey S., Pham, Avian, Chitibomma, Nikilish, Yates, Macey, Barrera, Kaylene, Atchison, Marvin J., and Gorski, Titio F.
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LEG injuries , *VERTEBRAL fractures , *SPINAL injuries , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *LOSS of consciousness - Abstract
Background: Skydiving is an increasingly popular recreational activity in the United States and worldwide. While it is considered a high-risk sport, the United States Parachute Association reported a fatality of .28 per 100 000 jumps in 2022. Although mortality rates are low, the true rate of survivable injuries is unknown. Injuries requiring hospitalization are not uncommon and may be underreported in the literature. Anticipating these injuries and analyzing short-term outcomes following parachuting accidents would be useful for the development of mitigation strategies and to increase the safety of jumpers. Methods: A retrospective cohort review of 126 consecutive patients presenting to a Level II Trauma Center after skydiving accidents between 2016 and 2023. Patient baseline characteristics, patterns of injury, surgical procedures, and in-hospital outcomes were reviewed. Results: A total of 126 patients were included. One hundred and seventeen patients (93%) presented immediately following the accident, 65 (51.6%) were trauma activations, and 14 (11.1%) patients experienced loss of consciousness. Fractures of the lower extremity occurred in 57 (45%), fractures of the spine 48 (38%), upper extremity 13 (10%), pelvis 11 (9%). Of the spinal injuries, 10 injuries occurred in the cervical spine, 16 thoracic, 22 lumbar, 5 sacral, and 3 coccygeal spine. Eleven patients (9%) suffered multilevel spine injuries. Mean injury severity score was 7 (range 0-75). A third of patients required at least 1 surgical procedure (n = 43, 34%). Median length stay was 2 days (IQR 1, 5). Of patients who survived to our trauma center, there were two mortalities, both due to catastrophic intracranial hemorrhage. Discussion: Although the 30-day mortality rate for patient who presented to our trauma center is low, it can bear significant risks including major injury. The most common injuries were lower extremity and spinal in origin with a third of patients overall requiring at least one operation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Spinal trauma related to military combat: characteristics, mechanisms of injury and principles of management.
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Robiati, Louise, Spurrier, Edward, and Tsirikos, Athanasios I.
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SPINAL injuries ,WOUNDS & injuries ,EMERGENCY medical services ,WAR ,SEVERITY of illness index ,WORK-related injuries ,WOUND care ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Trauma-related spinal injuries have been reported as far back as Egyptian times when their severity was recognized but treatment limited and outcomes poor. Advances in the knowledge and management of these injuries have arisen due to increased periods of conflict in the 20th and 21st centuries. With terrorist activity increasing globally, clinicians working in the civilian environment are increasingly being called upon to manage severe, high-energy injuries of the sort usually seen in conflict. This review considers the differences in the mechanism, pattern, and management of spinal trauma in a military combat setting to allow translation to a civilian setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Spinal trauma in children and adolescents: mechanisms of injury, anatomical characteristics and principles of treatment.
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Ismael Aguirre, Maryem-Fama and Tsirikos, Athanasios I
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SPINAL injuries ,BLUNT trauma ,BIOMECHANICS ,WOUNDS & injuries ,TRAFFIC accidents ,DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis ,SPORTS injuries ,SPINAL cord injuries ,VERTEBRAL fractures ,AGE distribution ,DISEASES ,JOINT dislocations ,BONE fractures ,SPINE ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,ACCIDENTAL falls ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Spinal trauma in children and adolescents, including spinal cord injury, fractures and dislocations, is relatively uncommon, but represents the highest risk of morbidity and mortality of all paediatric injuries. Motor vehicle accidents, falls from heights and sport accidents resulting in blunt trauma are the most frequent mechanisms of injury. The average age of presentation is approximately 12 years old. Injury following spinal trauma differs according to age-specific biomechanical characteristics of the developing spine. The most common site of injury in younger children is the cervical spine, whereas injury to the thoracolumbar spine is more common in adolescents. Differential diagnosis following trauma should include physiological particularities of the developing spine. Search for concomitant lesions is mandatory as patients frequently present with more than one vertebral fracture. Injury in this population can significantly affect the developing spine leading to neurological trauma and progressive deformity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Spinopelvic dissociation: aetiology, presentation and principles of treatment.
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Price, Michael J, Rodham, Paul Lambton, Tsirikos, Athanasios I, and McMillan, Tristan E
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SPINAL injuries ,WOUNDS & injuries ,RISK assessment ,BONE fractures ,PELVIC fractures ,SACRAL fractures ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Spinopelvic dissociation describes the traumatic separation of the axial and appendicular skeleton, commonly involving bilateral vertical sacral fractures which may be linked by a transverse fracture line. This injury may occur in patients with osteoporosis, in which there may be relative stability with minimal displacement; or result from high-energy trauma with extensive associated injuries and an increased risk of complications. Operative intervention forms the mainstay of treatment for high-energy injuries, although the heterogenous nature and relative rarity of this phenomenon renders a comprehensive treatment strategy difficult to define. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Trauma to the lower cervical spine (sub-axial or C3–C7) in adults.
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Shekhar, Himanshu and Demetriades, Andreas K.
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WOUNDS & injuries ,SPINAL injuries ,SPINAL cord injuries ,ORTHOPEDICS ,CERVICAL vertebrae ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
In comparison to upper cervical and thoraco-lumbar regions, injury to the lower cervical spine (subaxial, C3–C7) is more likely to be associated with spinal cord injury. This makes this a region of special interest in the context of trauma. A sound understanding of the different injury patterns, morphology, mechanisms, neurological deficit and patient-specific factors is essential in individualizing management strategies. In this article we review the anatomy, clinical patterns of injury, and the options in their clinical management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Biomechanics of the spine and the implications for spinal injuries.
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Roberts, Simon B and Tsirikos, Athanasios I
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BIOMECHANICS ,WOUNDS & injuries ,SPINAL injuries ,RISK assessment ,SPINE ,DISEASE risk factors ,CHILDREN ,ADULTS - Abstract
Biomechanics is the application of principles of engineering and computers to biological problems. Clinical biomechanics of the spine is the understanding of normal and pathological functions of the human vertebral column in response to mechanical insult, which may include traumatic, degenerative, pathological, or slowly applied loads to the spine. Spinal biomechanics involves the regional features of the vertebrae, intervertebral discs, ligaments, facet joints and muscles. The role of these structures individually and in concert in relation to spinal injuries is discussed. Regional spinal biomechanics, maintenance of spinal stability and assessment of spinal instability following injury are described. Finally, the biomechanical principles, individual structural components, mechanisms of injury and principles specific to the adult and paediatric spine are reviewed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Gastrointestinal bleeding following traumatic brain injury: A clinical study on predisposing factors and outcomes.
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Mahmoodkhani, Mehdi, Naeimi, Arvin, Zohrehvand, Amirhosein, Sabouri, Masih, and Heidari, Mohammad
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BRAIN injuries ,GLASGOW Coma Scale ,PEPTIC ulcer ,SPINAL injuries ,CAUSES of death - Abstract
Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the most common causes of death and disability worldwide. Stress ulcers are common in critically ill patients and can lead to life-threatening gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB). This study investigates the impact of predisposing factors on GIB and outcomes of TBI patients. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included TBI patients admitted between February 2019 and November 2021. Patients' demographic information and clinical characteristics were collected and divided into Post-TBI GIB and No-GIB groups. During clinical follow-up, the Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS) and mortality were assessed. The correlation between predisposing factors and GIB was investigated. Results: Out of 164 eligible patients, 66.5% were males, and the mean age was 31.38 ± 13.44 years. There was a higher rate of severe TBIs (p<0.001), intra-axial lesions (P=0.014), hypotension at admission (p<0.001), and concurrent coagulopathies (p<0.001) in the Post-TBI GIB group compared to the No-GIB group. In contrast, the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) level upon admission and discharge (p<0.001) and serum hemoglobin level at admission (p<0.001) were lower in the Post-TBI GIB group than in the other group. Moreover, primary GCS (P=0.017) and hypotension at admission (P=0.009), spinal injury (P=0.028), and intra-axial brain injury (P=0.018) were independently associated with GIB in TBI patients. Conclusion: Primary GCS and hypotension at admission, spinal injury, and intra-axial brain injury are independent predictors for GIB in TBI patients. The presence of GIB in TBI patients is associated with worse neurological outcomes as assessed by GOS at approximately 18 months. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. A manual-based family intervention for families living with acquired brain or spinal cord injury: a qualitative study of families' experiences.
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Wolffbrandt, Mia Moth, Soendergaard, Pernille Langer, Biering-Sørensen, Fin, Sundekilde, Linda, Kjeldgaard, Amanda, Schow, Trine, Arango-Lasprilla, Juan Carlos, and Norup, Anne
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BRAIN injury treatment , *SPINAL injuries , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *STATISTICAL sampling , *INTERVIEWING , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FAMILY attitudes , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH , *FAMILY support - Abstract
Purpose: To explore families' experiences of participating in a family intervention, targeting families living with the consequences of acquired brain injury (ABI) or spinal cord injury (SCI). Materials and methods: Individuals with ABI or SCI and their family members were recruited from a randomised controlled trial investigating the effectiveness of the manual-based family intervention, which consisted of eight weekly sessions. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 16 families (n = 33). The data were analyzed through reflexive thematic analysis. Results: One central theme was developed "A sense of belonging together again", describing the value of the reciprocal format of the family intervention, where individuals with ABI or SCI and their family members gained new insights into each other while building up their relationship. The central theme was supported by three additional themes: "Strengthened communication and emotional control", "Acknowledging the changed life situation" and "Being seen as a whole person". Conclusions: The family intervention supported the families to strengthen family cohesion and to be capable to manage the changed life situation. The findings emphasize the importance of a family-centered approach in neurorehabilitation, and how healthcare professionals play a significant role in facilitating families to achieve a balanced level of family cohesion. IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION: Acquiring an injury to the brain or spinal cord constitutes a severe life change for the entire family and therefore a family-centered approach in neurorehabilitation is crucial. As individuals with injury and their family members often feel disconnected during rehabilitation, healthcare professionals play a significant role in facilitating the family to share their experiences with each other to strengthen family cohesion. Not all families are aware of their need for support. Thus, healthcare professionals should pay particular attention to identify the individual family's needs for being supported. During conversations with families, healthcare professionals should focus on the balance between separateness and togetherness in the family system to support the families in achieving a balanced level of family cohesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Comparison of Clinical Outcomes of Posterior-Only Transforaminal Debridement and Interbody Fusion With Preservation of Posterior Ligamentous Complex Versus Conventional Posterior-Only Debridement and Interbody Fusion for Thoracic Spine Tuberculosis: A Prospective, Randomized, Controlled, Clinical Trial - A Pilot Study
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Wang, Yuxiang, Xiao, Shuntian, Zeng, Guohui, Zhang, Hongqi, Alonge, Emmanuel, and Yang, Zhuocheng
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SPINAL tuberculosis , *SURGICAL blood loss , *BLOOD sedimentation , *THORACIC vertebrae , *SPINAL injuries , *DEBRIDEMENT - Abstract
Objective: The main objective of this study was to analyze the efficacy and feasibility of surgical management for patients with thoracic spinal tuberculous spondylitis (STB) by using posterior-only transforaminal debridement and interbody fusion (PTDIF) with preservation of posterior ligamentous complex (PLC) and noninferior of PTDIF compared with conventional posterior-only debridement and interbody fusion (CPDIF). Methods: From January 2019 to January 2022, a prospective, randomized, controlled trial was conducted in which patients with thoracic STB were enrolled and assigned to undergo either the PTDIF group (group A) or CPDIF group (group B) in a 1:1 ratio. The clinical efficacy was evaluated on average operation time, blood loss, hospitalization durations, visual analogue scale, Oswestry Disability Index scores, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-Reactive protein (CRP), and neurological function recovery using the American Spinal Injury Association's impairment scale and operative complications. Radiological measurements included kyphosis correction, loss of correction. The outcomes were compared between the groups at preoperation, postoperaion, and final follow-up. Results: All 65 patients were completely cured during the follow-up. The intraoperative blood loss and operation time in group B were more than that in group A. All patients were pain-free at the final follow-up visit. ESR, CRP returned to normal limits in all patients 3 months after surgery. All patients had improved neurological signs. No significant difference was found in kyphosis angle correction, loss of correction between the 2 groups. Conclusion: PTDIF, with preservation of PLC, achieved debridement, decompression, and reconstruction of the spine's stability, similar to CPDIF in the surgical treatment of thoracic STB. PTDIF has less surgical trauma with less intraoperative blood loss and operation time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Cannabis use by individuals with spinal cord injury in the UK: a call for improved patient education and physician awareness for pain and spasticity management.
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Anas, Mohammad, Raja, Usman, Ahmad, Bilal Ibrahim, and Raza, Wajid A.
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PATIENT education , *MEDICAL marijuana , *CHRONIC pain , *SPINAL injuries , *PHYSICIANS , *SPASTICITY , *SPINAL cord injuries - Abstract
Study design: Prospective observational qualitative study. Objective: Cannabis is used by patients for the treatment of chronic pain, spasticity, sleep issues or mood disorders such as anxiety and depression. Since 2018, it has been authorised in the United Kingdom for medical use as an unlicensed medicine. This study aims to determine if patients are using cannabis for the management of symptoms related to spinal cord injury, and if so, whether they are using medical or illicit cannabis. Methods: Spinal cord injury patients from the Yorkshire Regional Spinal Injuries Centre and SPINE Community in the United Kingdom were surveyed. Participants were sent a 7-point electronic survey. All results were anonymous, and confidentiality was maintained throughout the process. Results: In total, 223 patients completed the survey. Not all patients answered every question. Of those who responded 65.35% (n = 132) were paraplegic and 34.65% (n = 70) were tetraplegic. Patients were suffering from chronic pain (longer than 3 months), spasticity, loss of/difficulty in sleeping or anxiety/depression. Almost 15% (14.93%, n = 33 out of 221) used cannabis to manage their symptoms, out of those the majority used street cannabis (79.41%, n = 27 out of 34) were using street cannabis. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that there are spinal cord injury patients in the UK using cannabis to treat their symptoms. A majority appear to be using illicit cannabis. Given that cannabis can interact with other medications, and that the quality and content of illicit cannabis can be highly variable and at times dangerous, it is important for physicians to discuss cannabis use with their patients. This can inform prescribing and allow them to educate patients on the dangers of medical cannabis and potential alternatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Investigating Research Hotspots of Combat-related Spinal Injuries: A 30-year Bibliometric Analysis Study.
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Wang, Pengru, Zhou, Shangbin, Li, Bo, Wang, Yingtian, and Xu, Wei
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SPINAL cord injuries , *MILITARY nurses , *SPINAL injuries , *MILITARY medicine , *BIBLIOMETRICS - Abstract
Introduction Spinal cord injuries often lead to significant motor and sensory deficits, as well as autonomic dysfunction. Compared with normal spinal injuries, combat-related spinal injuries (CRSIs) are usually more complex and challenging to treat because of multiple traumas, firing-line treatments, and arduous initial treatments on a battlefield. Yet numerous issues remain unresolved about clinical treatment and scientific research. The enhancement of CRSI diagnosis and treatment quality by military surgeons and nurses is imperative. The objective of this study is to identify the frontiers, hotspots, and trends among recent research, summarize the development process of clinical trials, and visualize them systematically. Materials and Methods We collected publications from CRSI based on the Core Collection of Web of Science for 30 years from January 1, 1993 to May 1, 2023.Visualizations of the knowledge maps were produced using VOSviewer and CiteSpace software. We examined annual trends of publications and distribution patterns, the number of publications, as well as the research hotspots. Results Among 201 documents, it was found that there was a stable upward trend in publications. There were 2 rapid growth stages during the 30 years. Among all countries, the USA contributed the most publications, along with the highest influence and the most international cooperation. Military Medicine was the journal of the maximum publications, whereas the Spine journal was the most influential one. Keyword co-occurrence analysis and trend topics analysis revealed that these articles focused 5 distinct categories for CRSI. Conclusions As the first bibliometric study focused on CRSI, we demonstrated the evolution of the field and provided future research directions. We summarized the hotspots and 5 clusters published. This would serve as a useful guide for clinicians and scientists regarding CRSI global impacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Surgical management of transcervical gunshot injury presented with CSF leak and progressive left upper extremity paresis: a case report and literature review.
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Bagherzadeh, Sadegh, Roohollahi, Faramarz, Shafizadeh, Milad, Jangholi, Ehsan, Rabiee, Shervin, Rostami, Mohsen, Jouibari, Morteza Faghih, and Jafari, Mohammad
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CEREBROSPINAL fluid leak , *PENETRATING wounds , *LITERATURE reviews , *SPINAL injuries , *RESEARCH questions , *GUNSHOT wounds - Abstract
Introduction: Penetrating neck trauma (PNT) due to gunshot injuries is one of the challenging conditions with the potential for both significant morbidities and mortality. Research question: There are significant concerns in the approach to patients with spinal gunshot injuries. Surgery indications, methods of surgery, and management of CSF leaks are the main concerns of these patients. Methods and materials: An 11-year-old boy was referred to our center with a single gunshot wound to the left side of the posterior cervical region 2 days ago with cerebrospinal fluid leakage and left arm weakness. Results: The patient underwent surgery, and the pellet was removed. His left arm weakness fully recovered after the operation, and no new symptoms developed during the 1-year follow-up. Conclusion: Timely surgery could dramatically improve outcomes in PNT patients with mild symptoms and prevent worsening neurological defects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Evaluation of traumatic spinal injuries: a pediatric perspective.
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Şık, Nihan, Bulut, Sena Kalkan, Şalbaş, Özge Yıldırım, Yılmaz, Durgül, and Duman, Murat
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CHILDREN'S injuries , *SPINAL cord injuries , *PEDIATRIC intensive care , *CHILD patients , *VERTEBRAL fractures , *SPINAL injuries - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of the present study is to provide information about pediatric patients with spinal trauma. Methods: A single-center retrospective chart review was carried out. Children who arrived at the pediatric emergency department due to trauma and those with spinal pathology confirmed by radiological assessment were included. Demographics, mechanisms of trauma, clinical findings, radiological investigations, applied treatments, hospital stay and prognosis were recorded. Results: A total of 105 patients [59 (56.2%) boys; mean age: 12.9 ± 3.8 years (mean ± SD)] were included. The most common age group was that of 14–18 years (58.1%). The three most common trauma mechanisms were road traffic collisions (RTCs) (60.0%), falls (32.4%), and diving into water (2.9%). A fracture of the spine was detected in 97.1% patients, vertebral dislocation in 10.7%, and spinal cord injury in 16.3%. Of the patients, 36.9% were admitted to the ward and 18.4% to the pediatric intensive care unit; 17.1% were discharged with severe complications and 2.9% cases resulted in death. While 34.3% of the patients had a clinically isolated spine injury, the remaining cases entailed an injury to at least one other body part; the most common associated injuries were to the head (39.8%), abdomen (36.1%), and external areas (28.0%). Conclusion: Spinal trauma was found to have occurred mostly in adolescent males, and the majority of those cases were due to RTCs. Data on the incidence and demographic factors of pediatric spinal trauma are crucial in furthering preventive measures, allowing for the identification of at-risk populations and treatment modalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. The changing epidemiology of traumatic spine injuries: a trends analysis of 26 years of patients at a major level 1 trauma center in the United States.
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Chiu, Anthony K., Pease, Tyler J., Prakash, Hans, Oster, Brittany A., Smith, Ryan A., Sahlani, Mario, Ratanpal, Amit S., Amin, Idris, Scalea, Thomas M., Bivona, Louis J., Jauregui, Julio J., Cavanaugh, Daniel L., Koh, Eugene Y., and Ludwig, Steven C.
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SPINAL cord injuries , *INTERVERTEBRAL disk , *TRAFFIC accidents , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *VERTEBRAL fractures , *SPINAL injuries - Abstract
Traumatic spinal injuries (TSI) are associated with high morbidity, mortality, and resource utilization. The epidemiology of TSI varies greatly across different countries and regions and is impacted by national income levels, infrastructure, and cultural factors. Further, there may be changes over time. It is essential to investigate TSI to gain useful epidemiologic information. However, there have been no recent studies on trends for TSI in the US, despite the changing population demographics, healthcare policy, and technology. As a result, reexamination is warranted to reflect how the modern era has affected the epidemiology of US spine trauma patients and their management. To determine epidemiologic trends in traumatic spine injuries over time. Retrospective analysis; level 1 trauma center in the United States. A total of 21,811 patients, between the years of 1996 and 2022, who presented with traumatic spine injury. Age, sex, race, Injury Severity Score, mechanism of injury, injury diagnosis, injury level, rate of operative intervention, hospital length of stay, intensive care unit length of stay, discharge disposition, in-hospital mortality. Data was collected from our institutional trauma registry over a 26-year period. Inclusion criteria involved at least one diagnosis of vertebral fracture, spinal cord injury, spinal subluxation, or intervertebral disc injury. Exclusion criteria consisted of patients with no diagnosed spine injury or a diagnosis of strain only. A total of 21,811 patients were included in the analysis. Descriptive statistics were tabulated and ordinary least squares linear regression was conducted for trends analysis. Regression analysis showed a significant upward trend in patient age (+13.83 years, β=+0.65/year, p<.001), female sex (+2.7%, β=+0.18%/year, p=.004), falls (+10.5%, β=+0.82%/year, p<.001), subluxations (+12.8%, β=+0.35%/year, p<.001), thoracic injuries (+1.5%, β=+0.28%/year, p<.001), and discharges to subacute rehab (+15.9%, β=+0.68%/year, p<.001). There was a significant downward trend in motor vehicle crashes (-7.8%, β=-0.47%/year, p=.016), firearms injuries (-3.4%, β=-0.19%/year, p<.001), sports/recreation injuries (-2.9%, β=-0.18%/year, p<.001), spinal cord injuries (-11.25%, β=-0.37%, p<.001), complete spinal cord injuries (-7.6%, β=-0.24%/year, p<.001), and discharges to home (+4.5%, β=-0.27%/year, p=.011). At our institution, the average spine trauma patient has trended toward older females. Falls represent an increasing proportion of the mechanism of injury, on a trajectory to become the most common cause. With time, there have been fewer spinal cord injuries and a lower proportion of complete injuries. At discharge, there has been a surge in the utilization of subacute rehabilitation facilities. Overall, there has been no significant change in injury severity, rate of operative intervention, length of stay, or mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Multi-institutional review of characteristics and management of gunshot wounds to the spine.
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Santangelo, Gabrielle, Wathen, Connor, Pieters, Thomas, George, Derek D., Worley, Logan, Macaluso, Dominick, Dagli, Mert Marcel, Catanzaro, Sandra, Gu, Ben, Welch, William C., Petrov, Dmitry, Vates, G. Edward, Ozturk, Ali K., Schuster, James, and Stone, Jonathan J.
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THORACIC vertebrae , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *BLACK men , *SPINE , *VERTEBRAL artery , *SPINAL injuries , *SPINAL surgery - Abstract
Gunshot wounds (GSWs) to the vertebral column represent an important cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States, constituting approximately 20% of all spinal injuries. The management of these injuries is an understudied and controversial topic, given its heterogeneity and lack of follow-up data. To characterize the management and follow-up of GSWs to the spine. A multi-institutional retrospective review of the experience of two urban Level 1 trauma centers. Patients with GSWs to the spine between 2010–2021. Measures included work status, follow-up healthcare utilization, and pain management were collected. Charts were reviewed for demographics, injury characteristics, surgery and medical management, and follow-up. Statistical analysis included T-tests and ANOVA for comparisons of continuous variables and chi-square testing for categorical variables. All statistics were performed on SPSS v24 (IBM, Armonk, NY). A total of 271 patients were included for analysis. The average age was 28 years old, 82.7% of patients were black, 90% were male, and 76.4% had Medicare/Medicaid. The thoracic spine (35%) was most commonly injured followed by lumbar (33.9%) and cervical (25.6%). Cervical GSW was associated with higher mortality (p<.001); 8.7% of patients developed subsequent osteomyelitis/discitis, 71.3% received prophylactic antibiotics, and 56.1% of cervical GSW had a confirmed vertebral or carotid artery injury. ASIA scores at presentation were most commonly A (26.9%), D (20.7%), or E (19.6%), followed by C (7.4%) and B (6.6%). 18.8% of patients were unable to be assessed at presentation. ASIA score declined in only 2 patients, while 15.5% improved over their hospital stay. Those who improved were more likely to have ASIA B injury (p<.001). Overall, 9.2% of patients underwent spinal surgery. Of these, 33% presented as ASIA A, 21% as ASIA B, 29% as ASIA C, and 13% as ASIA D. Surgery was not associated with an improvement in ASIA score. Given the ubiquitous and heterogeneous experience with GSWs to the spine, rigorous attempts should be made to define this population and its clinical and surgical outcomes. Here, we present an analysis of 11 years of patients presenting to two large trauma centers to elucidate patterns in presentation, management, and follow-up. We highlight that GSWs to the cervical spine are most often seen in young black male patients. They were associated with high mortality and high rates of injury to vertebral arteries and that surgical intervention did not alter rates of discitis/osteomyelitis or propensity for neurologic recovery; moreover, there was no incidence of delayed spinal instability in the study population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Riluzole is Effective on Spinal Decompression for Treating Acute Spinal Injury When Compared With Methylprednisolone and the Combination of Two Drugs: In Vivo Rat Model.
- Author
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Onder, Cem, Onder, Cigdem, Akesen, Selcan, Yumusak, Ezgi, and Akesen, Burak
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LABORATORY rats ,ANIMAL experimentation ,NERVE tissue ,SPINAL cord injuries ,SPINAL injuries - Abstract
Study Design: Randomized controlled animal experiment. Objectives: To determine and compare the efficacy of riluzole, MPS and the combination of two drugs in a rat model with acute spinal trauma, electrophysiologically and histopathologically. Methods: 59 rats were divided into 4 groups as control, riluzole (6 mg/kg, every 12 hours for 7 days), MPS (30 mg/kg, 2nd and 4th hours after injury) and riluzole + MPS. Spinal trauma was created and the subjects were followed for 7 days. Electrophysiological recordings were made via neuromonitoring. The subjects were sacrificed and histopathological examination was made. Results: For the amplitude values, mean alteration in the period from the spinal cord injury to the end of the 7th day is 15.89 ± 20.00%, 210.93 ± 199.44%, 24.75% ± 10.13% increase and 18.91 ± 30.01% decrease for the control, riluzole, riluzole + MPS and MPS groups, respectively. Although the riluzole treatment group produced the greatest increase in amplitude, it was observed that no treatment provided a significant improvement compared to the control group, in terms of latency and amplitude. It was observed that there was significantly less cavitation area in the riluzole treatment group compared to the control group (P =.020). (P <.05). Conclusions: Electrophysiologically, no treatment was found to provide significant improvement. Histopathologically, it was observed that riluzole provided significant neural tissue protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Prehospital guidelines on in-water traumatic spinal injuries for lifeguards and prehospital emergency medical services: an international Delphi consensus study.
- Author
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Breindahl, Niklas, Bierens, Joost L. M., Wiberg, Sebastian, Barcala-Furelos, Roberto, and Maschmann, Christian
- Abstract
Background: Trauma guidelines on spinal motion restriction (SMR) have changed drastically in recent years. An international group of experts explored whether consensus could be reached and if guidelines on SMR performed by trained lifeguards and prehospital EMS following in-water traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) should also be changed. Methods: An international three-round Delphi process was conducted from October 2022 to November 2023. In Delphi round one, brainstorming resulted in an exhaustive list of recommendations for handling patients with suspected in-water TSCI. The list was also used to construct a preliminary flowchart for in-water SMR. In Delphi round two, three levels of agreement for each recommendation and the flowchart were established. Recommendations with strong consensus (≥ 85% agreement) underwent minor revisions and entered round three; recommendations with moderate consensus (75–85% agreement) underwent major revisions in two consecutive phases; and recommendations with weak consensus (< 75% agreement) were excluded. In Delphi round 3, the level of consensus for each of the final recommendations and each of the routes in the flowchart was tested using the same procedure as in Delphi round 2. Results: Twenty-four experts participated in Delphi round one. The response rates for Delphi rounds two and three were 92% and 88%, respectively. The study resulted in 25 recommendations and one flowchart with four flowchart paths; 24 recommendations received strong consensus (≥ 85%), and one recommendation received moderate consensus (81%). Each of the four paths in the flowchart received strong consensus (90–95%). The integral flowchart received strong consensus (93%). Conclusions: This study produced expert consensus on 25 recommendations and a flowchart on handling patients with suspected in-water TSCI by trained lifeguards and prehospital EMS. These results provide clear and simple guidelines on SMR, which can standardise training and guidelines on SMR performed by trained lifeguards or prehospital EMS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Analysis of Severe Spinal Injuries in Korean Elite Female Wrestlers.
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Song, Munku, Yoon, Sewoon, Choi, Yongchul, and Yoo, Sangcheol
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SPINAL injuries ,SPORTS injuries ,MEDICAL personnel ,ELITE athletes ,INTERVERTEBRAL disk - Abstract
Women's wrestling is actively practiced in many countries. While severe spinal injuries pose a threat to an athlete's career and health, research on severe spinal injuries in female wrestlers remains limited. The aim of this study was to investigate the characteristics of severe spinal injuries and post-injury management in Korean female wrestlers. We enrolled 54 female wrestlers participating in the national team selection competition. Interviews were conducted to examine the characteristics of spinal injuries that resulted in a time loss of more than three weeks from training throughout their athletic careers and their post-injury management practices. Approximately 46% of participants experienced severe spinal injuries, and 52% faced re-injuries during their wrestling careers. These injuries predominantly occurred during technical training due to overuse during tackling and standing attacks. The most frequent injuries were lumbosacral disc injuries (72%) and cervical disc injuries (20%), with 36% requiring surgery. Nearly half of the injured athletes received specialized rehabilitation, yet roughly 76% resumed training without medical clearance. Athletes injured during their student years were notably less likely to receive specialized rehabilitation compared with those injured during their professional careers (p = 0.011). On average, athletes returned to play within 2.7 to 3.0 months. Spinal injury characteristics and post-injury management were not significantly different between the light- and heavyweight classes. While Korean female wrestlers are at a high risk of experiencing severe spinal injuries and re-injuries during their careers, appropriate post-injury management is often lacking, highlighting the need for proactive intervention by healthcare professionals to prevent recurrent spinal injuries in female wrestlers and to ensure safe return to training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Neurosurgical Injuries Associated with Recreational Horseback Riding: A 6-year Retrospective Analysis.
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De Jesus, Orlando and Vigo-Prieto, Juan
- Subjects
- *
EQUESTRIANISM , *HELMETS , *NEUROSURGEONS , *INPATIENT care , *SPINAL injuries , *MEDIAN (Mathematics) , *HEAD injuries - Abstract
Horseback riding can cause severe brain and spinal injuries. This study aimed to identify the spectrum of neurosurgical injuries related to recreational horseback riding. A retrospective study was performed utilizing the University of Puerto Rico neurosurgery database to identify patients who were consulted to the neurosurgery service between 2018 and 2023 after a horse fall during recreational activities. The outcome upon discharge using the modified Rankin scale (mRS) was documented. Descriptive statistics were used to report frequency and median values. The neurosurgery service evaluated and managed 112 patients with a horseback riding fall-related injury during 6 years. Ninety-eight (87.5%) patients were male. The patients' median age was 31.5 (IQR 22–40). There were 89 head injuries (79.5%), 19 spinal injuries (17%), and 4 combined head/spine injuries (3.5%). Forty percent of the patients were admitted to inpatient care with a median length of stay of 7 days (IQR 3–17). Twenty-four patients (21%) required surgery. Upon discharge, 86.6% of the patients had an mRS grade of 0–2, 3.6% had a grade of 3, 1.8% had a grade of 4, and 1.8% had a grade of 5. Seven patients (6%) died (mRS grade 6). Most neurologic injuries involve isolated trauma to the head. Fifteen percent of the riders' falls were caused after the horse was impacted by a motor vehicle. Forty percent of the patients require admission and 21% undergo surgery. Ten percent of the patients had a poor mRS grade of 4– to 6 when discharged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Diagnostic accuracy of an artificial intelligence algorithm versus radiologists for fracture detection on cervical spine CT.
- Author
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van den Wittenboer, Gaby J., van der Kolk, Brigitta Y. M., Nijholt, Ingrid M., Langius-Wiffen, Eline, van Dijk, Rogier A., van Hasselt, Boudewijn A. A. M., Podlogar, Martin, van den Brink, Wimar A., Bouma, Gert Joan, Schep, Niels W. L., Maas, Mario, and Boomsma, Martijn F.
- Subjects
- *
CERVICAL vertebrae , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *RADIOLOGISTS , *SPIRAL computed tomography , *VERTEBRAL fractures - Abstract
Objectives: To compare diagnostic accuracy of a deep learning artificial intelligence (AI) for cervical spine (C-spine) fracture detection on CT to attending radiologists and assess which undetected fractures were injuries in need of stabilising therapy (IST). Methods: This single-centre, retrospective diagnostic accuracy study included consecutive patients (age ≥18 years; 2007–2014) screened for C-spine fractures with CT. To validate ground truth, one radiologist and three neurosurgeons independently examined scans positive for fracture. Negative scans were followed up until 2022 through patient files and two radiologists reviewed negative scans that were flagged positive by AI. The neurosurgeons determined which fractures were ISTs. Diagnostic accuracy of AI and attending radiologists (index tests) were compared using McNemar. Results: Of the 2368 scans (median age, 48, interquartile range 30–65; 1441 men) analysed, 221 (9.3%) scans contained C-spine fractures with 133 IST. AI detected 158/221 scans with fractures (sensitivity 71.5%, 95% CI 65.5–77.4%) and 2118/2147 scans without fractures (specificity 98.6%, 95% CI 98.2–99.1). In comparison, attending radiologists detected 195/221 scans with fractures (sensitivity 88.2%, 95% CI 84.0–92.5%, p < 0.001) and 2130/2147 scans without fracture (specificity 99.2%, 95% CI 98.8–99.6, p = 0.07). Of the fractures undetected by AI 30/63 were ISTs versus 4/26 for radiologists. AI detected 22/26 fractures undetected by the radiologists, including 3/4 undetected ISTs. Conclusion: Compared to attending radiologists, the artificial intelligence has a lower sensitivity and a higher miss rate of fractures in need of stabilising therapy; however, it detected most fractures undetected by the radiologists, including fractures in need of stabilising therapy. Clinical relevance statement The artificial intelligence algorithm missed more cervical spine fractures on CT than attending radiologists, but detected 84.6% of fractures undetected by radiologists, including fractures in need of stabilising therapy. Key Points: The impact of artificial intelligence for cervical spine fracture detection on CT on fracture management is unknown. The algorithm detected less fractures than attending radiologists, but detected most fractures undetected by the radiologists including almost all in need of stabilising therapy. The artificial intelligence algorithm shows potential as a concurrent reader. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Association of Elevated Perioperative Blood Glucose With Complications and Postoperative Outcomes Following Traumatic Spine Surgery.
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BAKAES, YIANNI, SPITNALE, MICHAEL, GAUTHIER, CHASE, KUNG, JUSTIN E., EDELMAN, DAVID, BIDWELL, RICHARD, SHAHID, MICHEL, and GRABOWSKI, GREGORY
- Subjects
BLOOD sugar ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,SURGICAL complications ,SPINAL injuries ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SPINAL surgery - Abstract
Background: Perioperative blood glucose control has been demonstrated to influence outcomes following spine surgery, though this association has not been fully elucidated in patients with traumatic spine injuries. This study sought to determine the association between perioperative blood glucose levels and complications or outcomes in patients undergoing spine surgery due to injury. Methods: A retrospective review was conducted to identify patients who underwent spine surgery due to traumatic injuries between 1 March 2020 and 29 September 2022 at a single academic institution. Descriptive factors, complications, and outcomes were compared between those with a postoperative blood glucose level of <200 mg/dL and those with a preoperative glucose of <200 mg/dL. Results: Patients with a post- and preoperative blood glucose of ≥200 mg/dL had significantly higher odds of respiratory complications (OR = 2.1, 2.1, P = 0.02, 0.03), skin/wound complications (OR = 2.2, 2.8, P = 0.04, 0.03), and increased hospital length of stay (OR = 9.6, 12.1, P = 0.02, 0.03) compared with those with blood glucose of <200 mg/dL. Those with postoperative glucose ≥200 mg/dL also had significantly higher odds of inpatient mortality (OR = 4.5, P = 0.04) when controlling for confounding factors. Neither pre- nor postoperative blood glucose of ≥200 mg/dL was associated with an improvement in American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale score at the final follow-up when controlling for multiple confounding factors (P = 0.44, 0.06). Conclusion: Elevated blood glucose both pre- and postoperatively was associated with an increased rate of postoperative complications and negative postoperative outcomes. However, there was no association between elevated blood glucose levels and neurological recovery following traumatic spinal injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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36. The top-cited military relevant spine articles.
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Homeier, Daniel D., Kang, Daniel, Molinari, Robert, and Mesfin, Addisu
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MUSCULOSKELETAL system injuries ,SACRUM injuries ,SPINAL injuries ,CITATION analysis ,SPINAL cord injuries ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDICAL research ,LUMBAR vertebrae ,AERONAUTICS in medicine ,SPINE ,MILITARY medicine ,ENVIRONMENTAL medicine ,LUMBAR pain ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Historically musculoskeletal injury has substantially affected United States (US) service members. Lumbosacral spine injuries are among the most common sites of injury for service members across all US military branches and usually presents with pain in the lower back and extremities. The aim of this study is to identify and describe the 50 most-cited articles relevant to military medicine on the subject of the spine. In April 2020 Web of Science was used to search the key words: spinal cord injury, spine, thoracic spine, lumbar spine, cervical spine, sacrum, sacral, cervical fusion, lumbar fusion, sacral fracture, combat, back pain, neck pain, and military. Articles published from 1900 to 2020 were evaluated for relevance to military spine orthopaedics and ranked based on citation number. The 50 most-cited articles were characterized based on country of origin, journal of publication, affiliated institution, topic, military branch, and conflict. 1900 articles met search criteria. The 50 most-cited articles were cited 24 to 119 times and published between 1993 and 2017. 30 articles (60%) originated in the United States. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine accounted for the most frequent (n = 10) destination journal followed by Spine (n = 8). 37 institutions contributed to the top 50 most-cited articles. The most common article type was clinically focused retrospective analysis 36% (n = 18), clinically focused cohort study 10% (n = 5), and clinically focused cohort questionnaire, cross-sectional analysis, and randomized study 8% each (n = 4). 90% of articles were non-surgical (n = 45). The US Army had the greatest number of associated articles. Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom were the most-cited conflicts. The 50 most-cited articles relevant to military spine orthopaedics are predominantly clinically focused, arising from the US, and published in Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine , Spine , and The Spine Journal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. Telemonitored Exercise to Attenuate Metabolic Dysregulation in Spinal Cord Injury (TEAM-SCI)
- Author
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Eduard Tiozzo, PhD, Research Associate Professor
- Published
- 2024
38. Assessment of the Reliability and Validity of the Leg Lateral Reach Test in Adolescent Tennis Players
- Author
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Sevim Beyza Ölmez, Principal Investigator
- Published
- 2024
39. Study of Probable Benefit of the Neuro-Spinal Scaffold™ in Subjects With Complete Thoracic AIS A Spinal Cord Injury as Compared to Standard of Care (INSPIRE 2)
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- 2024
40. CEUS For Intraoperative Spinal Cord Injury
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South Carolina Spinal Cord Injury Research Fund and Stephen Kalhorn, Professor-Faculty
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- 2024
41. Nathalie McGloin: Racing driver and Spinal Track co-founder.
- Author
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BARKER, JOHN
- Subjects
WHEELCHAIR rugby ,AUDI automobiles ,SPINAL injuries ,CRASH testing ,CRITICAL care medicine - Abstract
Nathalie McGloin is the world's only female tetraplegic racing driver and the president of the FIA Disability and Accessibility Commission. After a car accident left her paralyzed from the chest down at the age of 16, she made a promise to herself that her disability would not stop her from achieving her goals. She co-founded Spinal Track, a charity that provides track and rally driving experiences to people with spinal injuries. McGloin's racing career has had its challenges, but she has persevered and is an inspiration to others with disabilities. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
42. Looking Beyond the Immediate Effects of Lumbar Spinal Manipulation Using Pain Pressure Threshold in Asymptomatic Individuals (LumbarPPTUMary)
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Matthew Schumacher, Dr. Schumacher, PT, DPT, OCS, FAAOMPT
- Published
- 2023
43. CT C-spine Audit and Feedback
- Author
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Karl Chamberlin, Assistant Professsor
- Published
- 2023
44. Developing a Decision Instrument to Guide Abdominal-pelvic CT Imaging of Blunt Trauma Patients (NEXUS AP CT)
- Author
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Brigham and Women's Hospital, University of California, San Francisco, Antelope Valley Hospital, and William Mower, Professor of Emergency Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
- Published
- 2023
45. The hidden value of MRI: modifying treatment decisions in C-spine injuries
- Author
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Niklas Rutsch, Florian Schmaranzer, Pascale Amrein, Martin Müller, Christoph E. Albers, and Sebastian F. Bigdon
- Subjects
Cervical vertebrae ,Spinal injuries ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Computed tomography ,Neck injuries ,Patient care management ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background data Computed Tomography (CT) is the gold standard for cervical spine (c-spine) evaluation. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) emerges due to its increasing availability and the lack of radiation exposure. However, MRI is costly and time-consuming, questioning its role in the emergency department (ED). This study investigates the added the value of an additional MRI for patients presenting with a c-spine injury in the ED. Methods We conducted a retrospective monocenter cohort study that included all patients with neck trauma presenting in the ED, who received imaging based on the NEXUS criteria. Spine surgeons performed a full-case review to classify each case into “c-spine injured” and “c-spine uninjured”. Injuries were classified according to the AO Spine classification. We assessed patients with a c-spine injury detected by CT, who received a subsequent MRI. In this subset, injuries were classified separately in both imaging modalities. We monitored the treatment changes after the additional MRI to evaluate characteristics of this cohort and the impact of the AO Spine Neurology/Modifier modifiers. Results We identified 4496 subjects, 2321 were eligible for inclusion and 186 were diagnosed with c-spine injuries in the retrospective case review. Fifty-six patients with a c-spine injury initially identified through CT received an additional MRI. The additional MRI significantly extended (geometric mean ratio 1.32, p
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- 2024
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46. Pharmacological Treatment of Acute Spinal Cord Injuries In The Light Of Recent Developments
- Author
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Mürteza Çakır
- Subjects
spinal injuries ,pharmacological agents ,stem cell transplantation ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Spinal injuries represent a significant public health issue with both individual and societal implications due to its potential to result in long-term or permanent disability and death. Today, notwithstanding the comprehensive elucidation of the mechanism of injury in its all aspects and breakthroughs in early diagnosis techniques and treatment, spinal injuries still retain their devastating nature. Although many agents hypothesized to possess neuroprotective and neuroregenerative properties have been demonstrated to be effective in the experiments, research involving human subjects is still in progress, offering promising developments. Methylprednisolone at a high dose is the most extensively investigated therapeutic for acute spinal injuries. Despite significant controversy, it remains a viable treatment option. It is anticipated that combining stem cell transplantation with multiple pharmacological agents will yield more favorable outcomes.
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- 2024
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47. Post-discharge follow-up of patients with spine trauma in the National Spinal Cord Injury Registry of Iran during the COVID-19 pandemic: Challenges and lessons learned
- Author
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Zahra Azadmanjir, Moein Khormali, Mohsen Sadeghi-Naini, Vali Baigi, Habibollah Pirnejad, Mohammad Dashtkoohi, Zahra Ghodsi, Seyed Behnam Jazayeri, Aidin Shakeri, Mahdi Mohammadzadeh, Laleh Bagheri, Mohammad-Sajjad Lotfi, Salman Daliri, Amir Azarhomayoun, Homayoun Sadeghi-Bazargani, Gerard O'reilly, and Vafa Rahimi-Movaghar
- Subjects
Follow-up studies ,Spinal injuries ,Spinal cord injuries ,COVID-19 ,NSCIR-IR ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the National Spinal Cord Injury Registry of Iran (NSCIR-IR) is to create an infrastructure to assess the quality of care for spine trauma and in this study, we aim to investigate whether the NSCIR-IR successfully provides necessary post-discharge follow-up data for these patients. Methods: An observational prospective study was conducted from April 11, 2021 to April 22, 2022 in 8 centers enrolled in NSCIR-IR, respectively Arak, Rasht, Urmia, Shahroud, Yazd, Kashan, Tabriz, and Tehran. Patients were classified into 3 groups based on their need for care resources, respectively: (1) non-spinal cord injury (SCI) patients without surgery (group 1), (2) non-SCI patients with surgery (group 2), and (3) SCI patients (group 3). The assessment tool was a self-designed questionnaire to evaluate the care quality in 3 phases: pre-hospital, in-hospital, and post-hospital. The data from the first 2 phases were collected through the registry. The post-hospital data were collected by conducting follow-up assessments. Telephone follow-ups were conducted for groups 1 and 2 (non-SCI patients), while group 3 (SCI patients) had a face-to-face visit. This study took place during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data on age and time interval from injury to follow-up were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD) and response rate and follow-up loss as a percentage. Results: Altogether 1538 telephone follow-up records related to 1292 patients were registered in the NSCIR-IR. Of the total calls, 918 (71.05%) were related to successful follow-ups, but 38 cases died and thus were excluded from data analysis. In the end, post-hospital data from 880 patients alive were gathered. The success rate of follow-ups by telephone for groups 1 and 2 was 73.38% and 67.05% respectively, compared to 66.67% by face-to-face visits for group 3, which was very hard during the COVID-19 pandemic. The data completion rate after discharge ranged from 48% – 100%, 22% – 100% and 29% – 100% for groups 1 – 3. Conclusions: To improve patient accessibility, NSCIR-IR should take measures during data gathering to increase the accuracy of registered contact information. Regarding the loss to follow-ups of SCI patients, NSCIR-IR should find strategies for remote assessment or motivate them to participate in follow-ups through, for example, providing transportation facilities or financial support.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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48. The hidden value of MRI: modifying treatment decisions in C-spine injuries.
- Author
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Rutsch, Niklas, Schmaranzer, Florian, Amrein, Pascale, Müller, Martin, Albers, Christoph E., and Bigdon, Sebastian F.
- Abstract
Background data: Computed Tomography (CT) is the gold standard for cervical spine (c-spine) evaluation. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) emerges due to its increasing availability and the lack of radiation exposure. However, MRI is costly and time-consuming, questioning its role in the emergency department (ED). This study investigates the added the value of an additional MRI for patients presenting with a c-spine injury in the ED. Methods: We conducted a retrospective monocenter cohort study that included all patients with neck trauma presenting in the ED, who received imaging based on the NEXUS criteria. Spine surgeons performed a full-case review to classify each case into "c-spine injured" and "c-spine uninjured". Injuries were classified according to the AO Spine classification. We assessed patients with a c-spine injury detected by CT, who received a subsequent MRI. In this subset, injuries were classified separately in both imaging modalities. We monitored the treatment changes after the additional MRI to evaluate characteristics of this cohort and the impact of the AO Spine Neurology/Modifier modifiers. Results: We identified 4496 subjects, 2321 were eligible for inclusion and 186 were diagnosed with c-spine injuries in the retrospective case review. Fifty-six patients with a c-spine injury initially identified through CT received an additional MRI. The additional MRI significantly extended (geometric mean ratio 1.32, p < 0.001) the duration of the patients' stay in the ED. Of this cohort, 25% had a change in treatment strategy and among the patients with neurological symptoms (AON ≥ 1), 45.8% experienced a change in treatment. Patients that were N-positive, had a 12.4 (95% CI 2.7–90.7, p < 0.01) times higher odds of a treatment change after an additional MRI than neurologically intact patients. Conclusion and relevance: Our study suggests that patients with a c-spine injury and neurological symptoms benefit from an additional MRI. In neurologically intact patients, an additional MRI retains value only when carefully evaluated on a case-by-case basis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Lumbopelvic fixation in the treatment of spinopelvic dissociation: union, complications, and neurologic outcomes of a multicenter case series.
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Moo Young, Justin P., Savakus, Jonathan C., Obey, Mitchel R., Morris, Cade A., Pereira, Daniel E., Hills, Jeffrey M., McKane, Ava, Babcock, Sharon N., Miller, Anna N., Mitchell, Phillip M., and Stephens, Byron F.
- Subjects
- *
LUMBAR vertebrae surgery , *SPINAL injuries , *WOUNDS & injuries , *PELVIC bones , *FRACTURE fixation , *KYPHOSIS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *LAMINECTOMY , *MEDICAL device removal , *SURGICAL complications , *TRAUMA centers , *SACRAL fractures , *PELVIC fractures , *REOPERATION , *RESEARCH , *LUMBAR vertebrae , *SURGICAL site infections , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose: To review outcomes of spinopelvic dissociation treated with open lumbopelvic fixation. Methods: We reviewed all cases of spinopelvic dissociation treated at three Level-I trauma centers with open lumbopelvic fixation, including those with adjunctive percutaneous fixation. We collected demographic data, associated injuries, pre- and postoperative neurologic status, pre- and postoperative kyphosis, and Roy-Camille classification. Outcomes included presence of union, reoperation rates, and complications involving hardware or wound. Results: From an initial cohort of 260 patients with spinopelvic dissociation, forty patients fulfilled inclusion criteria with a median follow-up of 351 days. Ten patients (25%) had a combination of percutaneous iliosacral and open lumbopelvic repair. Average pre- and postoperative kyphosis was 30 degrees and 26 degrees, respectively. Twenty patients (50%) had neurologic deficit preoperatively, and eight (20%) were unknown or unable to be assessed. All patients presenting with bowel or bladder dysfunction (n = 12) underwent laminectomy at time of surgery, with 3 patients (25%) having continued dysfunction at final follow-up. Surgical site infection occurred in four cases (10%) and wound complications in two (5%). All cases (100%) went on to union and five patients (13%) required hardware removal. Conclusion: Open lumbopelvic fixation resulted in a high union rate in the treatment of spinopelvic dissociation. Approximately 1 in 6 patients had a wound complication, the majority of which were surgical site infections. Bowel and bladder dysfunction at presentation were common with the majority of cases resolving by final follow-up when spinopelvic dissociation had been treated with decompression and stable fixation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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50. Injuries in Fatalities of Dismounted Blast: Identification of Four Mechanisms of Head and Spine Injury.
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Ashworth, Emily, Baxter, David, Gibb, Colonel Iain, Wilson, Mark, and Bull, Anthony M. J.
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HEAD injuries , *PENETRATING wounds , *SPINAL injuries , *FACIAL injuries , *BLAST injuries - Abstract
Blast is the most common injury mechanism in conflicts of this century due to the widespread use of explosives, confirmed by recent conflicts such as in Ukraine. Data from conflicts in the last century such as Northern Ireland, the Falklands, and Vietnam up to the present day show that between 16% and 21% of personnel suffered a traumatic brain injury. Typical features of fatal brain injury to those outside of a vehicle (hereafter referred to as dismounted) due to blast include the presence of hemorrhagic brain injury alongside skull fractures rather than isolated penetrating injuries more typical of traditional ballistic head injuries. The heterogeneity of dismounted blast has meant that analysis from databases is limited and therefore a detailed look at the radiological aspects of injury is needed to understand the mechanism and pathology of dismounted blast brain injury. The aim of this study was to identify the head and spinal injuries in fatalities due to dismounted blast. All UK military fatalities from dismounted blast who suffered a head injury from 2007–2013 in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts were identified retrospectively. Postmortem computerized tomography images (CTPMs) were interrogated for injuries to the head, neck, and spine. All injuries were documented and classified using a radiology brain injury classification (BIC) tool. Chi-squared (χ2) and Fisher's exact tests were used to investigate correlations between injuries, along with odds ratios for determining the direction of correlation. The correlations were clustered. There were 71 fatalities from dismounted blast with an associated head injury with a CTPM or initial CT available for analysis. The results showed the heterogeneity of injury from dismounted blast but also some potential identifiable injury constellations. These were: intracranial haemorrhage, intracranial deep haemorrhage, spinal injury, and facial injury. These identified injury patterns can now be investigated to consider injury mechanisms and so develop mitigation strategies or clinical treatments. Level of Evidence: Observational. Study type: cohort observational. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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