Upper Cervical Injuries

2006 ◽  
pp. 255-255
Author(s):  
Laila Das
2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrei F. Joaquim ◽  
Enrico Ghizoni ◽  
Helder Tedeschi ◽  
Brandon Lawrence ◽  
Darrel S. Brodke ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.E. COSAN ◽  
E. TEL ◽  
A. ARSLANTAS ◽  
M. VURAL ◽  
A.I. GUNER

2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
AndreiF Joaquim ◽  
AlpeshA Patel ◽  
Helder Tedeschi ◽  
AlexanderR Vaccaro ◽  
AlexandreR. D. Yacoub ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 700-706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen A. Hill ◽  
Carole A. Miller ◽  
Edward J. Kosnik ◽  
William E. Hunt

✓ This review of pediatric neck injuries includes patients admitted to Children's Hospital of Columbus, Ohio, during the period 1969 to 1979. The 122 patients with neck injuries constituted 1.4% of the total neurosurgical admissions during this time. Forty-eight patients had cervical strains; 74 had involvement of the spinal column; and 27 had neurological deficits. The injuries reached their peak incidence during the summer months, with motor-vehicle accidents accounting for 31%, diving injuries and falls from a height 20% each, football injuries 8%, other sports 11%, and miscellaneous 10%. There is a clear division of patients into a group aged 8 years or less with exclusively upper cervical injuries, and an older group with pancervical injuries. In the younger children, the injuries involved soft tissue (subluxation was seen more frequently than fracture), and tended to occur through subchondral growth plates, with a more reliable union than similar bone injuries. In the older children, the pattern and etiology of injury are the same as in adults. The entire cervical axis is at risk, and there is a tendency to fracture bone rather than cartilaginous structures.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 10787J ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. Hooper

Neurosurgery ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 995-1015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dachling Pang ◽  
William R. Nemzek ◽  
John Zovickian

Abstract OBJECTIVE The diagnosis of atlanto-occipital dislocation (AOD) remains problematic as a result of a lack of reliable radiodiagnostic criteria. In Part 1 of the AOD series, we showed that the normal occiput–C1 joint in children has an extremely narrow joint gap (condyle–C1 interval [CCI]) with great left-right symmetry. In Part 2, we used a CCI of 4 mm or greater measured on reformatted computed tomographic (CT) scans as the indicator for AOD and tested the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of CCI against published criteria. The clinical manifestation, neuroimaging findings, management, and outcome of our series of patients with AOD are also reported. METHOD For diagnostic sensitivity, we applied the CCI criterion on 16 patients who fulfilled one or more accepted radiodiagnostic criteria of AOD and who showed clinical and imaging hallmarks of the syndrome. All 16 patients had plain cervical spine x-rays, head CT scans, axial cervical spine CT scans with reconstruction, and magnetic resonance imaging scans. The diagnostic yield and false-negative rate of CCI were compared with those of four published “standard” tests, namely Wholey's dens-basion interval, Powers' ratio, Harris' basion-axis interval, and Sun's interspinous ratio. The diagnostic value of “nonstandard” indicators such as cervicomedullary deficits, tectorial membrane and other ligamentous damage, perimedullary subarachnoid hemorrhage, and extra-axial blood at C1−C2 were also assessed. For diagnostic specificity, we applied CCI and the “standard” and “nonstandard” tests on 10 patients from five classes of non-AOD upper cervical injuries. The false-positive diagnostic rates for AOD of all respective tests were documented. RESULTS The CCI criterion was positive in all 16 patients with AOD with a diagnostic sensitivity of 100%. Fourteen patients had bilateral AOD with disruption and widening of both OC1 joints. Two patients had unilateral AOD with only one joint wider than 4 mm. The abnormal CCI varied from 5 to 34 mm. Eight patients showed blatant left-right joint asymmetry in either CCI or anatomic conformation. The diagnostic sensitivities for the “standard” tests are as follows: Wholey's, 50%; Powers', 37.5%; Harris', 31%; and Sun's, 25%, with false-negative rates of 50, 62.5, 69, and 75%, respectively. The sensitivities for the “nonstandard” indicators are: tectorial membrane damage, 71%; perimedullary blood, 63%; and C1−C2 extra-axial blood, 75%, with false-negative rates of 29, 37, and 25%, respectively. Fifteen patients with AOD had occiput-cervical fusion. There were one early and two delayed deaths (19% mortality); two patients (12%) had complete or severe residual high quadriplegia, but 11 children (69%) enjoyed excellent neurological recovery. CCI was normal in all 10 patients with non-AOD upper cervical injuries with a diagnostic specificity of 100%. The false-positive rates for the four “standard” tests were: Sun's, 60%; Harris', 50%; Wholey's, 30%; and Powers', 10%; for the “nonstandard” indicator, the rates were: cervicomedullary deficits, 70%; tectorial membrane damage, 40%; C1−C2 extra-axial blood, 40%; and perimedullary blood, 30%. CONCLUSION The CCI criterion has the highest diagnostic sensitivity and specificity for AOD among all other radiodiagnostic criteria and indicators. CCI is easily computed from reconstructed CT scans, has almost no logistical or technical distortions, can capture occiput–C1 joint dislocation in all three planes, and is unaffected by congenital anomalies or maturation changes of adjacent structures. Because CCI is the only test that directly measures the integrity of the actual joint injured in AOD and a widened CCI cannot be concealed by postinjury changes in the head and neck relationship, it surpasses others that use changeable landmarks.


1995 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 223-233
Author(s):  
C.B Huckell ◽  
S.M Tooke ◽  
J.P Kostuik

2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd McCall ◽  
Dan Fassett ◽  
Douglas Brockmeyer

✓ Injuries of the cervical spine are relatively rare in children but are a distinct clinical entity compared with those found in adults. The unique biomechanics of the pediatric cervical spine lead to a different distribution of injuries and distinct radiographic features. Children younger than 9 years of age usually have upper cervical injuries, whereas older children, whose biomechanics more closely resemble those of adults, are prone to lower cervical injuries. Pediatric cervical injuries are more frequently ligamentous in nature, and children are also more prone to spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality than adults are. Physial injuries are specific only to children. Radiographically benign findings, such as pseudosubluxation and synchondrosis, can be mistaken for traumatic injuries. External immobilization with a halo brace can be difficult and is associated with a high complication rate because of the thin calvaria in children. Surgical options have improved with the development of instrumentation specifically for children, but special considerations exist, such as the small size and growth potential of the pediatric spine.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francis Deng ◽  
Craig Hacking

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