Spinal trauma – Causes, types and assessment
Common causes of spinal trauma
- Falls
- Assault
- Road traffic collisions (RTCs)
- Sporting accidents
Definitions in spinal trauma
- Neurogenic shock
- Neurogenic shock results from damage to descending sympathetic pathways in the cervical and upper thoracic spinal cord resulting in loss of vasomotor tone and cardiac sympathetic innervation
- This leads to hypotension and bradycardia, or absence of appropriate tachycardia as vagal tone dominates
- Hypotension may not be corrected by fluid resuscitation alone and may require the use of vasopressors
- Spinal shock
- Spinal shock refers to flaccidity and areflexia seen after spinal cord injury
- It may occur completely non-functional although the cord is not necessarily destroyed
- The duration is variable
Specific types of spinal injury
- Mechanisms of injury
- Axial loading
- Flexion
- Extension
- Rotation
- Lateral flexion
- Distraction
- Atlanto-occipital dislocation
- Mechanism: severe traumatic flexion and distraction
- Most patients die of apnoea or will have severe neurological impairment eg quadriplegia
- Common cause of death in shaken baby syndrome
- Atlas (C1) fractures
- Jefferson fracture
- Burst fracture of both the anterior and posterior rings of C1 with lateral displacement of the lateral masses
- Mechanism: axial loading
- Jefferson fracture
- Axis (C2) fractures
- Odontoid peg fractures
- Type I: fracture through the tip of the peg
- Type II: fracture through the base of the peg
- Type III: fracture through the base of the peg into the lateral masses of C2
- Hangman’s fracture
- Fracture of the posterior elements of C2
- Mechanism: hyperextension
- C3-7 fractures
- Fracture-dislocations
- Thoracic spine fractures
- Anterior wedge compression injuries
- Mechanism: axial loading with flexion
- Burst injuries
- Mechanism: vertical-axial compression
- Chance fractures
- Transverse fractures through vertebral body
- Mechanism: flexion about an axis anterior to vertebral column eg from wearing lap belts inappropriately high and not over the pelvic girdle
- Fracture-dislocations
- Anterior wedge compression injuries
Clinical features in spinal trauma
- General features
- Neck pain/tenderness
- Back pain/tenderness
- Weakness
- Absent sensation/sensory level
- Absent reflexes (initially)
- Urinary incontinence or retention
- Loss of anal tone
- Neurogenic shock
- Hypotension
- Bradycardia/absence of appropriate tachycardia
- Spinal cord syndromes
- Brown-Sequard syndrome
- Caused by hemisection of the spinal cord
- Results in ipsilateral weakness and sensory deficit with contralateral loss of pain and temperature
- Central cord syndrome
- Caused by vascular compromise of the spinal cord in the distribution of the anterior spinal artery, usually due to hyperextension injuries
- Results in upper limb weakness greater than lower limb weakness (upper limb motor fibres lie more centrally) and a variable, ‘cape-like’ sensory deficit
- Anterior cord syndrome
- Caused vascular insufficiency of the anterior spinal artery
- Results in bilateral paraparesis and loss of pain and temperature with preservation of dorsal column function
- Brown-Sequard syndrome
Clinical assessment in spinal trauma
- Dermatomes
- A dermatome is an area of skin innervated by sensory axons of a particular spinal nerve root
- Key dermatomes are
- C2: posterior head
- C3: neck
- C4: shoulder
- C5: lateral upper arm
- C6: lateral forearm & thumb
- C7: middle finger
- C8: medial hand and little finger
- T1: medial forearm
- T2: medial upper arm
- T4: nipples
- T8: xiphisternum
- T10: umbilicus
- T12: pubic symphysis
- L1: groin
- L2: anterior thigh
- L3: anterior knee
- L4: medial shin
- L5: dorsal foot and first web space
- S1: sole and lateral foot
- S2: posterior leg and thigh
- S3: ischial tuberosity
- S4-5: perianal
- Myotomes
- A myotome is group of muscles innervated by motor axons of a particular spinal nerve root
- Key myotomes are
- C5: shoulder abduction, deltoid
- C6: elbow flexion, biceps
- C7: elbow extension, triceps
- C8: wrist and finger flexion
- T1: finger abduction, interossei
- L2: hip flexion, iliopsoas
- L3-4: knee extension, quadriceps
- L4-S1: knee flexion, hamstrings
- L5: ankle and hallux dorsiflexion, extensor hallucis longus
- S1: ankle plantarflexion, gastrocnemius
- MRC grading of power
- 5 = normal power
- 4 = weak
- 3 = movement against gravity
- 2 = movement with gravity eliminated
- 1 = flicker of movement
- 0 = complete paralysis
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