TY - JOUR
T1 - Biomechanics, evaluation, and management of subaxial cervical spine injuries
T2 - A comprehensive review of the literature
AU - Wang, Timothy Y.
AU - Mehta, Vikram A.
AU - Dalton, Tara
AU - Sankey, Eric W.
AU - Rory Goodwin, C.
AU - Karikari, Isaac O.
AU - Shaffrey, Christopher I.
AU - Than, Khoi D.
AU - Abd-El-Barr, Muhammad M.
N1 - Funding Information:
Timothy Y. Wang, MD: none. Vikram A. Mehta, MD, MPH: none. Tara Dalton, MSc BS: none. Eric W. Sankey, MD: none. Khoi D. Than MD: consultant for Bioventus; Honoraria from LifeNet Health and DJO. Christopher Shaffrey: consultant to Medtronic, Biomet, NuVasive, and Globus, and is a patent holder for Medtronic and Biomet. C. Rory Goodwin MD PhD: supported by grants from NIH/NINDS K12 NRCDP Physician Scientist Award (2K12NS080223-06) and Robert Wood Johnson Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program (RWJ 76238). Isaac O. Karikari MD: consultant for Nuvasive; Receives Fellowship funding from Nuvasive. Member of Advisory Board for Johnson&Johnson Adult Deformity Group. Muhammad M. Abd-El-Barr MD PhD: consultant for Spineology.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - Study design: Literature review. Objectives: It has been reported that 2.4–3.7% of all blunt trauma victims suffer some element of cervical spine fracture, with the majority of these patients suffering from C3-7 (subaxial) involvement. With the improvement of first-response to trauma in the community, there are an increasing number of patients who survive their initial trauma and thus arrive at the hospital in need of further evaluation, stabilization, and management of these injuries. Methods: A comprehensive literature review compiled all relevant data on the biomechanics, imaging, evaluation, and medical and surgical management strategies for subaxial cervical spine fractures. Results: After review of the current literature on subaxial cervical spine biomechanics, imaging characteristics, evaluation strategies and surgical and orthopedic management techniques, the authors created a comprehensive review and protocol for management of subaxial cervical spine fractures. Conclusions: The subaxial cervical spine is biomechanically and anatomically unique from the remainder of the spinal axis. Evaluation of subaxial cervical spine injuries is nuanced, and improper management of these injuries can lead to significant patient morbidity and even death. This provides a comprehensive review combining anatomy, imaging characteristics, evaluation strategies, and surgical and orthopedic management principles for subaxial cervical spine fractures.
AB - Study design: Literature review. Objectives: It has been reported that 2.4–3.7% of all blunt trauma victims suffer some element of cervical spine fracture, with the majority of these patients suffering from C3-7 (subaxial) involvement. With the improvement of first-response to trauma in the community, there are an increasing number of patients who survive their initial trauma and thus arrive at the hospital in need of further evaluation, stabilization, and management of these injuries. Methods: A comprehensive literature review compiled all relevant data on the biomechanics, imaging, evaluation, and medical and surgical management strategies for subaxial cervical spine fractures. Results: After review of the current literature on subaxial cervical spine biomechanics, imaging characteristics, evaluation strategies and surgical and orthopedic management techniques, the authors created a comprehensive review and protocol for management of subaxial cervical spine fractures. Conclusions: The subaxial cervical spine is biomechanically and anatomically unique from the remainder of the spinal axis. Evaluation of subaxial cervical spine injuries is nuanced, and improper management of these injuries can lead to significant patient morbidity and even death. This provides a comprehensive review combining anatomy, imaging characteristics, evaluation strategies, and surgical and orthopedic management principles for subaxial cervical spine fractures.
KW - Cervical spine
KW - Evaluation
KW - Fracture
KW - Management
KW - Trauma
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jocn.2020.11.004
DO - 10.1016/j.jocn.2020.11.004
M3 - Review article
C2 - 33281051
AN - SCOPUS:85097435397
SN - 0967-5868
VL - 83
SP - 131
EP - 139
JO - Journal of Clinical Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Clinical Neuroscience
ER -