Spinal injuries

Spinal injuries
Katherine Flack – 4
th
 year medical student
Tim Gardner – Orthopaedic Registrar
For IT
Text in blue indicates a question for students to answer
Information regarding how the question will work (eg free text of
multiple choice) is listed in the notes section of the slide
References are also in the notes section
Slides titled navigation is how the navigation pane should appear on
the side
 
Navigation
Anatomy revision
Overview of spinal fractures
-
Denis classification
-
Common types
Compression fracture case
-
Situation and background
-
Assessment
-
Overview of compression fractures
Traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI)
case
-
Situation and background
-
C-spine immobilisation
-
Assessment
-
Management 1
-
Management 2
-
Summary of TSCI
-
ASIA chart
-
Patterns of injuries
-
Management 3
Navigation part 2
Back pain
-
Presentation
-
Red flags
-
Differentials
 
Summary
 
 
Spinal column anatomy
33 bones separated by
intervertebral discs
Structure of vertebrae
Anterior ventral body – weight bearing
Posterior vertebral arch – multiple bony prominences which enable
the attachments for muscles and ligaments
 
Denis classification of spinal fractures
The Denis Classification of spinal fractures divides the spine into 3 columns
the anterior, middle and posterior
 
Anterior column 
– anterior longitudinal ligament and anterior half of
vertebral body
Middle column 
– posterior half of vertebral body and posterior
longitudinal ligament
Posterior column 
– pedicles, facet joints and supraspinous ligaments
 
If 2 or more of these columns are injured the spine is described as unstable
Compression
Chance
(flexion/distraction)
Burst
Anterior part of
vertebra breaks but the
posterior aspect
remains intact
therefore only loses
height anteriorly.
 
Commonly occurs in
patients with
osteoporosis.
 
Usually stable
Vertebra loses height on
both anterior and
posterior aspects.
 
Usual cause is falling
from height and landing
on feet.
Occurs when vertebrae
are suddenly pulled
away from each other
in a flexion-distraction
mechanism.
 
Associated with high
rates of mechanical
instabilities and
gastrointestinal injuries.
Most common types of spinal fractures
Click on the boxes to find out more about type of spine of spinal fracture
Compression fracture case
Situation and background
Mary is a 75 year old lady who lives alone in a bungalow. She has a
PMHx of acid reflux, osteoporosis, type 2 diabetes.
Whilst out gardening she slipped on the steps outside.
 
What are you worried about when an elderly patient presents with a
fall?
Fracture
Head injury
Collapse due to underlying cause – eg stroke, MI, hypoglycaemia, rupture
abdominal aortic anerusym
Assessment
When she arrives in A&E she is sent for an urgent x-ray which confirms your
suspicions of a compression fracture.
 
Select which aspect of her past medical history is most likely to have
contributed to her injury?
-
Acid reflux
-
Female
-
Osteoporosis
-
Type 2 diabetes
-
Age
Compression fracture
Compression fractures are
common in individuals with
osteoporosis.
 
Diagnosis is done using lateral x-
rays.
On x-ray there is a loss of
anterior, middle or posterior
vertebral height by 20%. This
shows the typical ‘wedge’ shape.
 
Treatment – observations and
pain management mostly
Traumatic spinal injury case
Situation and background
You are an FY1 working in A&E.
Greg (age 35) has arrived to ARI by helicopter after being involved in a
serious high speed head-on collision whilst driving.
 
He has been initially managed by trauma doctors at the scene and has
a cervical collar and ‘blocks and board’ in place.
 
He is able to talk and his main complaint to you is pain in neck and
tingling in arms.
C-spine immobilsation
This is how Greg arrives to
you
 
What is the main indication
in this case to use a c-spine
immobilisation collar and
blocks?
Paresthesia in extremities
Car collision mechanism
Assessment for
cervical spine injury
NICE recommend using the indications given
in the Canadian C-spine rule to determine
whether to maintain full in-line
immobilisation.
 
Using the Canadian-C spine rule Greg is
deemed to be high risk (due to dangerous
mechanism).
 
Therefore you should maintain full in-line
spinal immobilisation.
 
This is also used to determine if radiography
should be used, in this case the answer is
yes.
How do you initially manage the patient?
Take a thorough history
Give pain medication
<C>ABCDE approach
CT scan
<C>ABCDE
Next management
Thinking about each component of the <C>ABCDE
approach, list how you would now like to manage Greg?
 
When answering a complex question like this it can be
helpful to group into the C ABCDE order.
 
Catastrophic bleeding
IV access
Bloods – group and save (pink tube), FBC, U+E, Coag
Urgent CT scan request – ‘camp bastion protocol’ –
Head, neck, chest, abdomen, pelvis at least
 
Airways + breathing
Oxygen
15L high flow non-rebreathe mask
 
 
 
Circulation
IV fluid resuscitation – start with IV Crystalloid but
consider early switch to blood
 
Disability
Covered by CT scan
Neurological exam
 
Everything else
Pain relief – likely IV Opioid
Involve seniors and other specialities – Should have a
trauma call but just in case, make sure everyone is
here! (
orthopaedics
, general surgery, anaesthetics,
radiology)
Update family
Images to be included on page when answers appear from the previous slide
CT scan
After the initial handover and <C>ABCDE, Greg
is sent for a full CT scan.
 
Findings – C5/6 Facet joint dislocation
Free fluid in abdominal cavity, suspicious of
splenic rupture
No pelvic fracture
No pneumothorax, no rib fractures
No intracerebral injuries
No other bony injuries
Traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI)
More common in males.
Most are due to preventable causes such as RTA, sport injuries or
falls.
 
Can be classified as complete or incomplete (AOSpine Injury
Classification System).
Complete
 – damage affects the whole spinal cord width which causes
complete loss of sensation and paralysis below the level of injury.
Incomplete
 – damage only affects part of the spinal cord, hence only
partially implicating sensation or movement below the level of injury.
Pathophysiology of TSCI
Primary injury 
– the direct trauma from injury mechanism causes
damage to spinal cord.
 
Secondary injury 
– result of injuries to surrounding structures causing
compression on the spinal cord often from haematoma.
Spinal surgeon
The spinal orthopaedic surgeon is sent to review Greg.
 
First she goes through the ASIA chart to determine the level of
severity of neurological deficit.
ASIA chart
Developed as a universal classification tool for spinal cord injuries.
 
Grades
A: complete 
 no sensory or motor function preserved
B: sensory incomplete 
 sensory but not motor function is preserved
C: motor incomplete 
 less than half of key muscle functions below the
lesion have a muscle grade of >/= 3
D: motor incomplete 
 
half or more key muscles functions below the
lesion having a muscle grade >/= 3
E: normal
 
For more in depth classification look up the ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS).
Greg’s neurological injuries
Greg has these findings on neurological examination especially:
Anal tone normal
Weakness to wrist extension bilaterally
Numbness and tingling in thumb bilaterally
 
At which spinal level do these injuries correspond to?
-
C2/3
-
C3/4
-
C5/6
-
C6/7
ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS)
Based off of Greg’s injuries and ASIA chart, what AIS grade do you give him?
 
A
B
C
D
E
 
He has an incomplete TSCI as the damage only affects part of the spinal cord, hence
only partially implicating sensation or movement below the level of injury. He is not
paralysed below the level of injury indicating it is not a complete TSCI.
Patterns of injuries
Tetraplegia – impairment of function in arms, trunk, legs and pelvic
organs.
 
Paraplegia – impairment of function in trunk, legs and pelvic organs.
Arm function is preserved.
Management
Spinal column injuries can be managed non-operative or operative.
 
There are 2 absolute indications for surgical management of TSCI -
Progressive neurological deficit
Dislocation type injury to spinal column
 
What will the spinal surgeon’s decision be regarding Greg’s
management?
- Operate
Rehab
After stabilization of his major bleeding, he then has successful spinal
surgery and Greg is now in rehab.
 
Which members of the multi-disciplinary team may be involved in his care?
Medical team
Nurses
Physiotherapy
Speech and language
Occupational therapy
Psychologist
Approach to back pain history
taking
Back pain presentation
John is a 55 year old man who presents to his GP with back pain.
Using a systematic approach, which questions would you initially like
to ask regarding the pain?
Using SOCRATES
Site
Onset
Character
Radiating pain
Associated symptoms
Time/duration
Excerbating/relieving factors
Severity
Back pain presentation
John replies with these answers -
 
Pain is in lower back
It came on approximately a week ago after lifting a heavy box in work
Pain is dull and does not radiate
Regular ibuprofen helps a bit
Rates the pain an 7/10 and was at it’s worst the day after lifting the
box
Back pain red flags
Which red flags questions should you ask to rule out a more serious cause of
the back pain?
Cauda equina red flags
-
Bilateral sciatica
-
Bilateral motor weakness of legs
-
Difficulty initiating micturition
-
Faecal incontinence
-
Saddle anesthesia
-
Decreased anal tone
-
Erectile dysfunction
Other red flags
-
Night pain
-
Stiffness in morning
-
Major trauma
-
Gradual onset
-
Weight loss
-
Fever
-
History of cancer
Differentials of back pain
There are many differentials of back pain, try list as many as you can
Differentials of back pain
Back pain
Mechanical
-
Muscle of ligament
sprain
-
Herniated disc
-
Scoliosis
-
Degenerative changes
Spinal fracture
Cauda equina
Spinal stenosis
Ankylosing spondylitis
Spinal infection
Non-spinal related
Eg Ruptured aortic
aneurysms, pyelonephritis +
more
Cancer
John says he is not affected by any of those symptoms. He has a
normal PR exam, and no altered perineal sensation. He went to pass
urine before coming into the clinic room.
 
You are confident this is likely a mechanical cause and prescribe
simple analgesia to John with a worsening statement given.
 
 
Summary
Be aware of risk factors for compression fractures.
Recognise the signs of spinal cord injury and gain confidence using
the ASIA chart.
Recognise red flag symptoms in back pain which may require urgent
investigation.
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An overview of spinal injuries, including anatomy revision, types of spinal fractures, assessment, management, and common patterns of injuries. It also covers back pain presentation, red flags, differentials, and the structure of vertebrae. The Denis classification of spinal fractures and the most common types of spinal fractures are explored.

  • Spinal injuries
  • Anatomy
  • Spinal fractures
  • Management
  • Back pain
  • Denis classification
  • Vertebrae

Uploaded on Dec 22, 2023 | 3 Views


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Presentation Transcript


  1. Spinal injuries Katherine Flack 4thyear medical student Tim Gardner Orthopaedic Registrar

  2. For IT Text in blue indicates a question for students to answer Information regarding how the question will work (eg free text of multiple choice) is listed in the notes section of the slide References are also in the notes section Slides titled navigation is how the navigation pane should appear on the side

  3. Navigation Anatomy revision Overview of spinal fractures - Denis classification - Common types Compression fracture case - Situation and background - Assessment - Overview of compression fractures Traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) case - Situation and background - C-spine immobilisation - Assessment - Management 1 - Management 2 - Summary of TSCI - ASIA chart - Patterns of injuries - Management 3

  4. Navigation part 2 Back pain - Presentation - Red flags - Differentials Summary

  5. Spinal column anatomy 33 bones separated by intervertebral discs

  6. Structure of vertebrae Anterior ventral body weight bearing Posterior vertebral arch multiple bony prominences which enable the attachments for muscles and ligaments

  7. Denis classification of spinal fractures The Denis Classification of spinal fractures divides the spine into 3 columns the anterior, middle and posterior Anterior column anterior longitudinal ligament and anterior half of vertebral body Middle column posterior half of vertebral body and posterior longitudinal ligament Posterior column pedicles, facet joints and supraspinous ligaments If 2 or more of these columns are injured the spine is described as unstable

  8. Most common types of spinal fractures Click on the boxes to find out more about type of spine of spinal fracture Chance Burst Compression (flexion/distraction) Anterior part of vertebra breaks but the posterior aspect remains intact therefore only loses height anteriorly. Vertebra loses height on both anterior and posterior aspects. Occurs when vertebrae are suddenly pulled away from each other in a flexion-distraction mechanism. Usual cause is falling from height and landing on feet. Associated with high rates of mechanical instabilities and gastrointestinal injuries. Commonly occurs in patients with osteoporosis.

  9. Compression fracture case

  10. Situation and background Mary is a 75 year old lady who lives alone in a bungalow. She has a PMHx of acid reflux, osteoporosis, type 2 diabetes. Whilst out gardening she slipped on the steps outside. What are you worried about when an elderly patient presents with a fall? Fracture Head injury Collapse due to underlying cause eg stroke, MI, hypoglycaemia, rupture abdominal aortic anerusym

  11. Assessment When she arrives in A&E she is sent for an urgent x-ray which confirms your suspicions of a compression fracture. Select which aspect of her past medical history is most likely to have contributed to her injury? - Acid reflux - Female - Osteoporosis - Type 2 diabetes - Age

  12. Compression fracture Compression fractures are common in individuals with osteoporosis. Diagnosis is done using lateral x- rays. On x-ray there is a loss of anterior, middle or posterior vertebral height by 20%. This shows the typical wedge shape. Treatment observations and pain management mostly

  13. Traumatic spinal injury case

  14. Situation and background You are an FY1 working in A&E. Greg (age 35) has arrived to ARI by helicopter after being involved in a serious high speed head-on collision whilst driving. He has been initially managed by trauma doctors at the scene and has a cervical collar and blocks and board in place. He is able to talk and his main complaint to you is pain in neck and tingling in arms.

  15. C-spine immobilsation This is how Greg arrives to you What is the main indication in this case to use a c-spine immobilisation collar and blocks? Paresthesia in extremities Car collision mechanism

  16. Assessment for cervical spine injury NICE recommend using the indications given in the Canadian C-spine rule to determine whether to maintain full in-line immobilisation. Using the Canadian-C spine rule Greg is deemed to be high risk (due to dangerous mechanism). Therefore you should maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation. This is also used to determine if radiography should be used, in this case the answer is yes.

  17. How do you initially manage the patient? Take a thorough history Give pain medication <C>ABCDE approach CT scan

  18. <C>ABCDE Catastrophic bleeding / Cervical Spine Pelvic binder in place, abdomen hard. Neck Immobilisation C Airway There is no airway obstruction, airway patent A Breathing O2 sats at 92 and clear lung sounds. Equal chest expansion, no flail chest B Circulation Blood pressure is 95/60, weak pulse in peripheries. HR 110 bpm, cool peripherally C Disability Pupil responses equal and reactive, numbness and weakness in right arm D Exposure/everything else Glucose levels normal, multiple grazes and abdominal bruising but no other major external injuries E

  19. Next management Thinking about each component of the <C>ABCDE approach, list how you would now like to manage Greg? Circulation IV fluid resuscitation start with IV Crystalloid but consider early switch to blood When answering a complex question like this it can be helpful to group into the C ABCDE order. Disability Covered by CT scan Neurological exam Catastrophic bleeding IV access Bloods group and save (pink tube), FBC, U+E, Coag Urgent CT scan request camp bastion protocol Head, neck, chest, abdomen, pelvis at least Everything else Pain relief likely IV Opioid Involve seniors and other specialities Should have a trauma call but just in case, make sure everyone is here! (orthopaedics, general surgery, anaesthetics, radiology) Update family Airways + breathing Oxygen 15L high flow non-rebreathe mask

  20. Images to be included on page when answers appear from the previous slide

  21. CT scan After the initial handover and <C>ABCDE, Greg is sent for a full CT scan. Findings C5/6 Facet joint dislocation Free fluid in abdominal cavity, suspicious of splenic rupture No pelvic fracture No pneumothorax, no rib fractures No intracerebral injuries No other bony injuries

  22. Traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) More common in males. Most are due to preventable causes such as RTA, sport injuries or falls. Can be classified as complete or incomplete (AOSpine Injury Classification System). Complete damage affects the whole spinal cord width which causes complete loss of sensation and paralysis below the level of injury. Incomplete damage only affects part of the spinal cord, hence only partially implicating sensation or movement below the level of injury.

  23. Pathophysiology of TSCI Primary injury the direct trauma from injury mechanism causes damage to spinal cord. Secondary injury result of injuries to surrounding structures causing compression on the spinal cord often from haematoma.

  24. Spinal surgeon The spinal orthopaedic surgeon is sent to review Greg. First she goes through the ASIA chart to determine the level of severity of neurological deficit.

  25. ASIA chart Developed as a universal classification tool for spinal cord injuries. Grades A: complete no sensory or motor function preserved B: sensory incomplete sensory but not motor function is preserved C: motor incomplete less than half of key muscle functions below the lesion have a muscle grade of >/= 3 D: motor incomplete half or more key muscles functions below the lesion having a muscle grade >/= 3 E: normal For more in depth classification look up the ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS).

  26. Gregs neurological injuries Greg has these findings on neurological examination especially: Anal tone normal Weakness to wrist extension bilaterally Numbness and tingling in thumb bilaterally At which spinal level do these injuries correspond to? - C2/3 - C3/4 - C5/6 - C6/7

  27. ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS) Based off of Greg s injuries and ASIA chart, what AIS grade do you give him? A B C D E He has an incomplete TSCI as the damage only affects part of the spinal cord, hence only partially implicating sensation or movement below the level of injury. He is not paralysed below the level of injury indicating it is not a complete TSCI.

  28. Patterns of injuries Tetraplegia impairment of function in arms, trunk, legs and pelvic organs. Paraplegia impairment of function in trunk, legs and pelvic organs. Arm function is preserved.

  29. Management Spinal column injuries can be managed non-operative or operative. There are 2 absolute indications for surgical management of TSCI - Progressive neurological deficit Dislocation type injury to spinal column What will the spinal surgeon s decision be regarding Greg s management? - Operate

  30. Rehab After stabilization of his major bleeding, he then has successful spinal surgery and Greg is now in rehab. Which members of the multi-disciplinary team may be involved in his care? Medical team Nurses Physiotherapy Speech and language Occupational therapy Psychologist

  31. Approach to back pain history taking

  32. Back pain presentation John is a 55 year old man who presents to his GP with back pain.

  33. Using a systematic approach, which questions would you initially like to ask regarding the pain? Using SOCRATES Site Onset Character Radiating pain Associated symptoms Time/duration Excerbating/relieving factors Severity

  34. Back pain presentation John replies with these answers - Pain is in lower back It came on approximately a week ago after lifting a heavy box in work Pain is dull and does not radiate Regular ibuprofen helps a bit Rates the pain an 7/10 and was at it s worst the day after lifting the box

  35. Back pain red flags Which red flags questions should you ask to rule out a more serious cause of the back pain? Cauda equina red flags - Bilateral sciatica - Bilateral motor weakness of legs - Difficulty initiating micturition - Faecal incontinence - Saddle anesthesia - Decreased anal tone - Erectile dysfunction Other red flags - Night pain - Stiffness in morning - Major trauma - Gradual onset - Weight loss - Fever - History of cancer

  36. Differentials of back pain There are many differentials of back pain, try list as many as you can

  37. Differentials of back pain Mechanical - Muscle of ligament sprain - Herniated disc - Scoliosis - Degenerative changes Spinal fracture Cancer Spinal infection Back pain Non-spinal related Eg Ruptured aortic aneurysms, pyelonephritis + more Ankylosing spondylitis Cauda equina Spinal stenosis

  38. John says he is not affected by any of those symptoms. He has a normal PR exam, and no altered perineal sensation. He went to pass urine before coming into the clinic room. You are confident this is likely a mechanical cause and prescribe simple analgesia to John with a worsening statement given.

  39. Summary Be aware of risk factors for compression fractures. Recognise the signs of spinal cord injury and gain confidence using the ASIA chart. Recognise red flag symptoms in back pain which may require urgent investigation.

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