• World J Emerg Surg · Jan 2007

    Are upright lateral cervical radiographs in the obtunded trauma patient useful? A retrospective study.

    • Craig H Rabb, Jeffrey L Johnson, David VanSickle, Kathryn Beauchamp, Gene Bolles, and Ernest E Moore.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Denver Health Medical Center, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, CO, USA. Craig.Rabb@dhha.org
    • World J Emerg Surg. 2007 Jan 1; 2: 4.

    BackgroundThe best method for radiographic "clearance" of the cervical spine in obtunded patients prior to removal of cervical immobilization devices remains debated. Dynamic radiographs or MRI are thought to demonstrate unstable injuries, but can be expensive and cumbersome to obtain. An upright lateral cervical radiograph (ULCR) was performed in selected patients to investigate whether this study could provide this same information, to enable removal of cervical immobilization devices in the multiple trauma patient.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed our experience with ULCR in 683 blunt trauma victims who presented over a 3-year period, with either a Glasgow Coma Score <13 or who were intubated at the time of presentation.ResultsULCR was performed in 163 patients. Seven patients had studies interpreted to be abnormal, of which six were also abnormal, by either CT or MRI. The seventh patient's only abnormality was soft tissue swelling; MRI was otherwise normal. Six patients had ULCR interpreted as normal, but had abnormalities on either CT or MRI. None of the missed injuries required surgical stabilization, although one had a vertebral artery injury demonstrated on subsequent angiography. ULCR had an apparent sensitivity of 45.5% and specificity of 71.4%.ConclusionULCR are inferior to both CT and MRI in the detection of cervical injury in patients with normal plain radiographs. We therefore cannot recommend the use of ULCR in the obtunded trauma patient.

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