scholarly journals Lesões cervicais não cariosas e sua relação com hábitos parafuncionais / Non-carious cervical injuries and their relationship to parafunctional habits

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 27442-27459
Author(s):  
Cassia Elizabeth Ribeiro Jardim ◽  
Jorge Anthony Baars Corrêa de Carvalho ◽  
Maynara Mendes Braga ◽  
Aline Maquiné Pascareli Carlos ◽  
Sarah Pereira Alves Brasil
Keyword(s):  
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 565-566
Author(s):  

The Committee on Accident Prevention of the American Academy of Pediatrics, in co-operation with the Surgical Section of the same organization, has prepared the following statements to cover the emergency management of childhood skeletal trauma and burns. Both of these statements are endorsed by the Committee on Trauma of the American College of Surgeons and have been approved by the Federal Civil Defense Administration. EMERGENCY CARE OF CHILDHOOD SKELETAL TRAUMA 1. Evaluate and splint where they lie before moving. Do not attempt reduction. 2. Move cervical injuries face up on a rigid support with manual traction applied gently by cupping chin at the time of moving. Sand bags on either side of neck to prevent turning, if possible. 3. Spine injuries should not be flexed in transportation. 4. Lower leg injuries, transport in pillow strapped with belt. 5. Upper leg injuries, transport with both legs and trunk bound to board without circulatory interference. 6. Lower arm injuries, transport with splint such as rolled newspaper, gentle compression wrapping and sling. 7. Upper arm can be bound to chest with lower arm supporting in sling. 8. Open injuries or open wounds, cover with sterile dressing, do not dust with antibiotic, but systemic antibiotic is useful. Do not attempt to retract bone back under skin. Get to surgical care promptly. 9. Do not cover distal tips of extremities if it can be avoided thus allowing a circulation check to be made from time to time. EMERGENCY CARE OF BURNS 1. Burns are due to thermal agents (scalds or fire); chemical agents (battery acid or lye); radiation (sunburn or nuclear); and electrical energy.


1997 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Colombo ◽  
C. Maccagnano ◽  
C. Corona ◽  
A. Beltramello ◽  
G. Scialfa

Injury to the cervical spinal cord is a major health problem owing to its frequency and to the often devastating sequelae of serious trauma with respect to long-term disability for the patient. Cervical injuries are often reported in association with head trauma and cervical spinal cord injury appears to be a major contributing factor in acute death secondary to traffic accidents producing severe head injuries. A high incidence of neurological deficits is reported in cervical spinal trauma, but cervical injuries can escape detection in the acute phase if clinically silent or in patients unconscious from to head trauma. The most important predisposing factor in the concomitant occurrence of head and neck trauma is transmission of forces through the cranial vault to the cervical spine. Other underlying cervical spine diseases, either congenital or developmental, may also predispose to the development of cervical injuries. The spine includes bony-ligamentous structures and nervous structures. The bony-ligamentous involucre is anatomically predisposed to perform three major tasks: 1) maintenance of spinal statics; 2) mobilization in the three anatomic planes and 3) protection of nervous and vascular structures inside the spinal canal. The cervical spine is subjected to varying forces of flexion, flexion-rotation, extension and vertical compression which result in damage to the different components of the spine when they are applied beyond physiological limits. Biomechanical considerations of the different motion patterns that occur in the cervical spine are essential to understand the contribution of mechanical stresses to the development of specific spinal injuries. This chapter tackles the problem of a logical management of cervical spinal trauma based on clinical presentation to: a) identify the preferential diagnostic modality to investigate that type of injury (conventional X-Ray, Computed Tomography, Magnetic Resonance); b) interpret images, indipendently from the diagnostic modality utilized, considering the cause-effect relation between the traumatic force and the anatomic-functional structures involved by the trauma. The clinical picture may include pain, movement limitations and/or radiculo-myelopathy. Cerebral neurologic deficits can be the consequence of traumatic damage to the carotid and vertebral artery system in the neck. Evaluation of injury instability is one of the main goals of radiographic investigation. One classifies bony instability which is temporary, as opposed to disco-ligamentous instability which is permanent and usually requires surgical stabilization, and mixed instability. Conventional lateral and antero-posterior radiographs should be initially performed in patients with cervical trauma and in polytrauma and comatous patients who are difficult to assess clinically. They effectively screen vertebral fractures, vertebral body and facet dislocations and pre-vertebral soft tissue swelling. However, ligament disruption and instability can be underestimated by a normal disco-vertebral alignment. Dynamic flexion-extension views, useful to reveal such an instability, should never be performed in the acute phase particularly if fractures and neurologic deficits are present. CT scan, in addition, has several advantages: the axial plane provides an optimal view of the size and shape of the spinal canal, bony fragments and foreign bodies within the canal are very well depicted, posterior element fractures are better visualized. A preexsisting spondylotic narrow canal is well evaluated by CT as are post-traumatic disc herniations. Widening of the apophyseal joints, suggesting disruption of facet capsules and spinal instability, is best demonstrated by CT. However, CT has some limitations in evaluating ligament instability since it is performed in the neutral position and, in addition, it cannot visualize the medulla and its potential traumatic lesions. After the introduction of MRI, myelography and CT-myelography are no longer used to investigate cervical spine lesions involving cord and nerve roots. MRI should be performed in every patient presenting with neurologic deficits. The usefulness of MR is in detecting extradural compressive lesions like disc herniation and haematomas that need to be decompressed surgically. MRI can also evaluate ligamentous integrity and disk rupture. Bony fractures are revealed by MRI either by signal or morphologic alterations of vertebral bodies, but thin, linear fractures are less well identified than with CT. One of the main advantages of MRI is the direct identification of intrinsic cord pathology such as cord contusion and haemorrhage. Cord haemorrhage seems to be predictive of a complete lesion and of poor outcome. Therefore MRI is proposed to assess the prognosis of traumatic cord lesions, the best time for imaging ranging between 24 and 72 hours after injury.


Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1006
Author(s):  
Liisa Wainman ◽  
Erin L. Erskine ◽  
Mehdi Ahmadian ◽  
Thomas Matthew Hanna ◽  
Christopher R. West

As primary medical care for spinal cord injury (SCI) has improved over the last decades there are more individuals living with neurologically incomplete (vs. complete) cervical injuries. For these individuals, a number of promising therapies are being actively researched in pre-clinical settings that seek to strengthen the remaining spinal pathways with a view to improve motor function. To date, few, if any, of these interventions have been tested for their effectiveness to improve autonomic and cardiovascular (CV) function. As a first step to testing such therapies, we aimed to develop a model that has sufficient sparing of descending sympathetic pathways for these interventions to target yet induces robust CV impairment. Twenty-six Wistar rats were assigned to SCI (n = 13) or naïve (n = 13) groups. Animals were injured at the T3 spinal segment with 300 kdyn of force. Fourteen days post-SCI, left ventricular (LV) and arterial catheterization was performed to assess in vivo cardiac and hemodynamic function. Spinal cord lesion characteristics along with sparing in catecholaminergic and serotonergic projections were determined via immunohistochemistry. SCI produced a decrease in mean arterial pressure of 17 ± 3 mmHg (p < 0.001) and left ventricular contractility (end-systolic elastance) of 0.7 ± 0.1 mmHg/µL (p < 0.001). Our novel SCI model produced significant decreases in cardiac and hemodynamic function while preserving 33 ± 9% of white matter at the injury epicenter, which we believe makes it a useful pre-clinical model of SCI to study rehabilitation approaches designed to induce neuroplasticity.


Clinics ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 66 (5) ◽  
pp. 923-925 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Ventura ◽  
Elcio Shiyoiti Hirano ◽  
Gustavo Pereira Fraga
Keyword(s):  

2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 222-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. H. Nakstad ◽  
A. Server ◽  
R. Josefsen

Spine ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (12) ◽  
pp. 848-854 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew S. Chung ◽  
Justin L. Makovicka ◽  
Jeffrey D. Hassebrock ◽  
Karan A. Patel ◽  
Sailesh V. Tummala ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrei F. Joaquim ◽  
Enrico Ghizoni ◽  
Helder Tedeschi ◽  
Brandon Lawrence ◽  
Darrel S. Brodke ◽  
...  

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