• J Spinal Cord Med · Jan 2012

    Motion in the unstable thoracolumbar spine when spine boarding a prone patient.

    • Bryan P Conrad, Diana L Marchese, Glenn R Rechtine, and Marybeth Horodyski.
    • College of Medicine, University of Florida, FL, USA. bconrad@ufl.edu
    • J Spinal Cord Med. 2012 Jan 1; 35 (1): 53-7.

    IntroductionPrevious research has found that the log roll (LR) technique produces significant motion in the spinal column while transferring a supine patient onto a spine board. The purpose of this project was to determine whether log rolling a patient with an unstable spine from prone to supine with a pulling motion provides better thoracolumbar immobilization compared to log rolling with a push technique.MethodsA global instability was surgically created at the L1 level in five cadavers. Two spine-boarding protocols were tested (LR Push and LR Pull). Both techniques entailed performing a 180° LR rotation of the prone patient from the ground to the supine position on the spine board. An electromagnetic tracking device registered motion between the T12 and L2 vertebral segments. Six motion parameters were tracked. Repeated-measures statistical analysis was performed to evaluate angular and translational motion.ResultsLess motion was produced during the LR Push compared to the LR Pull for all six motion parameters. The difference was statistically significant for three of the six parameters (flexion-extension, axial translation, and anterior-posterior (A-P) translation).ConclusionsBoth the LR Push and LR Pull generated significant motion in the thoracolumbar spine during the prone to supine LR. The LR Push technique produced statistically less motion than the LR Pull, and should be considered when a prone patient with a suspected thoracolumbar injury needs to be transferred to a long spine board. More research is needed to identify techniques to further reduce the motion in the unstable spine during prone to supine LR.

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