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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Emergency radiology: straightening of the cervical spine in MDCT after trauma--a sign of injury or normal variant?
Aina KrtakovskaZsuszsanna DeakUlrich LinsenmaierFrancesco RuschiNora KammerStefan WirthStefan WirthMaximilian ReiserLucas L. GeyerLucas L. Geyersubject
AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyEmergency Medical Servicesanimal structuresLordosisAdolescentKyphosisSpinal Curvatures030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineTrauma CentersMultidetector Computed TomographyEmergency Radiology special featuremedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingKyphosisYoung adultRetrospective StudiesObserver Variationbusiness.industryRetrospective cohort studyGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCervical spineSpinenervous system diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal CurvaturesSpinal InjuriesCervical VertebraeLordosisCervical collarFemaleRadiologybusinesspsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCervical vertebraedescription
To evaluate whether straightening of the cervical spine (C-spine) alignment after trauma can be considered a significant multidetector CT (MDCT) finding.160 consecutive patients after C-spine trauma admitted to a Level 1 trauma centre received MDCT according to Canadian Cervical Spine Rule and National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study indication rule; subgroups with and without cervical collar immobilization (CCI +/-) were compared with a control group (n = 20) of non-traumatized patients. Two independent readers evaluated retrospectively the alignment, determined the absolute rotational angle of the posterior surface of C2 and C7 (ARA C2-7) and grouped the results for lordosis (-13°), straight (-13 to +6°) and kyphosis (+6°).In the two CCI-/CCI+ study groups, the straight or kyphotic alignment significantly (p = 0.001) predominated over lordosis. The number of patients with straight C-spine alignment was higher in the CCI+ group (CCI+ 69% vs CCI- 49%, p = 0.05). A comparison of the CCI+ group vs the CCI- group revealed a slightly smaller number of kyphotic (10% vs 18%, p = 0.34) and lordotic (21% vs 33%, p = 0.33) alignments. Statistically, however, the differences were of no significance. The control group revealed no significant differences.Straightening of the C-spine alone is not a definitive sign of injury but is a biomechanical variation due to CCI and neck positioning during MDCT or active patient control.Straightening of the C-spine alignment in MDCT alone is not a definitive sign of injury. Straightening of the C-spine alignment is related to neck positioning and active patient control. CCI has a straightening effect on the cervical alignment.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-05-01 | The British journal of radiology |