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AJNR Am J Neuroradiol · Apr 2013
Screening cervical spine CT in the emergency department, Phase 2: A prospective assessment of use.
- B Griffith, M Kelly, P Vallee, M Slezak, J Nagarwala, S Krupp, C P Loeckner, L R Schultz, and R Jain.
- Department of Radiology, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI 48202, USA. brentg@rad.hfh.edu
- AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2013 Apr 1;34(4):899-903.
Background And PurposeThe National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study Low-Risk Criteria were established to identify patients with a low probability of cervical spine injury in whom imaging of the cervical spine was unnecessary. The purpose of this study was to ascertain the number of unnecessary cervical spine CT studies on the basis of proper application of established clinical guidelines and, secondarily, to determine indications for ordering studies in the absence of guideline criteria.Materials And MethodsAll patients presenting to a level I trauma center for whom a screening cervical spine CT was ordered in the setting of blunt trauma were eligible for enrollment. For each study, the requesting clinician completed a survey regarding study indications. CT examinations were evaluated by a board-certified radiologist blinded to survey data to determine the presence or absence of cervical spine injury.ResultsOf 507 CT examinations, 5 (1%) were positive and 497 (98.0%) were negative for acute cervical spine injury. Five studies (1%) were indeterminate for acute injury but demonstrated no abnormality on subsequent imaging and clinical follow-up. Of the 502 studies without cervical spine injury, 81 (16.1%) were imaged despite meeting all 5 NEXUS criteria for nonimaging. Of these, the most common study indication was dangerous mechanism of injury (48.1%) followed by subjective neck pain (40.7%).ConclusionsStrict application of NEXUS criteria could potentially reduce the number of screening cervical spine CT scans in the setting of blunt trauma; this change would avoid a considerable amount of unnecessary radiation and cost.
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