fractures and luxations/subluxations COPY Flashcards
The most common cause of thoracolumbar burst fractures?
Substantial Axial loading force
What two types of fractures has predilection for the thoracolumbar spine?
- Burst frx
- vertebral body
- axial load
- failure of anterior and middle column
- Compression frx
- anterior column involved
- middle column intact
- usually stable frx.
- typically fall in elderly or osteoporotic pt.
What is a AOD?
Atlantooccipital dislocation
WHat is the treatment of an atlantooccipital dislocation?
- Immidiately IMMOBILISE.
Obs Traction has a 10% risk of deterioration. - Internal fixation and arthodesis ( fusion)
What can NOT be done in an AOD? How big is the risk
Traction - 10% risk of deterioration.
Another name for arthrodesis
fusion
What happens in a bulbo-cervical dissociation?
Occurs in injuries of C3 or above. Eg AOD.
* Immidiate pulmonary and cardiac arrest
* Death if CPR is not started within minutes.
* Usually quadriplegic and ventilator dependent
What cautions and contraindications are there for emergent decompressive spine surgery in SCI?
CAUTION: Often needed to be combined w stabilization.
CONTRAINDICATIONS:
* complete SCI more than 24h in the abscence of spinal shock. (test bulbous cavernous reflex)
* medically unstable patient
* central cord syndrome - BUT THIS IS CONTROVERSIAL
Contraindications for closed reduction in the spine
- Atlantooccipital disslocation (10% deterioration risk)
- Hangman type IIA or type III.
- Skull defect/frx at the anticipated site of the pin for reduction.
- caution in children under 3yo
- caution in elderly
- demineralised skull
- additional rostral injury
- Patients w movement disorders
What general group of muscles are innervated by C1-C4?
neck muscles.
Name 3 tyopes of atlantoaxial subluxations
- Rotatory - seen in children
- Anterior - AAS - anterior atlantoaxial subluxation - 33% of these get a deficit or die.
- Posterior - Rare. usually from erosion of the odontoid. - unstable and requires fusion.
How is a anterior atlantoaxial subluxation required?
Disruption of TAL - transverse atlantal ligament
Or from an incompetent odontoid process.
What is the most important ligament for stability in the occipitoatlantoaxial komplex?
The Transverse atlantal ligament.
the most common frx location in motorcycle injuries?
Th6 (upper thoracical spine)
Where are Jefferson frx localised?
In Atlas.
How many % of cervical spine frx are axis frx?
20%
What is the most common axis frx?
Odontoid frx.
Where are hangman frx localized?
To axis.
Are odontoid frx dangerous?
“die or live good” frx.
WHat is the grading score for odontoid frx?
Anderson and D’Alonzo
How common are flexion injuries of the subaxial cervical spine?
15% of cervical spine trauma.
What is a prototypical accident to cause subaxial flexion injury?
Compression-flexion as a dive on shallow water.
What is a teardrop frx?
A teardrop just beyond the anterior inferior edge of the injured vertebra.
Caused by hyperflexion or axial load at vertex of the skull with flexed neck.
What is important to look for in teardrop frx?
If the inferior margin of the frx vertebrae is displaced into the canal = Unstable.
What is a hyperextension avulsion frx?
A simple avulsion frx might also cause a small ship of bone off the anterior inferior VB, usually pulled off by traction of the anterior longitudinal ligament.
How to distinguish between a teardrop frx and an avulsion frx?
Probably avulsion:
* neurological intact
* smaller size of bone fragment
* No malalignment of VB
* No evidence of frx in sagittal plane
* No posterior element frx on XR/CT
* No prevertebral soft tissue swelling in front of frx vertebra
* No loss of VB height or disc space height
If everything speaks for an extension-avulsion frx - what does greenberg suggest to do w the pt?
*Make a flexion-extension XR. if ok
* Discharge w rigid collar. * New CT once pain subsided