Spinal trauma Flashcards

1
Q

what are the causes of cervical spine fractures?

A

commonly because of high energy injuries

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2
Q

potential issues with cervical spine fractures?

A

might be associated with head injury potentially dangerous unstable fractures can be missed in unconscious or confused patients - can lead to spinal cord injury

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3
Q

How is c-spine injury managed?

A

C-spine immobilisation (low threshold for this) - hard collar, sand bags, blocks on a spinal cord can remove the c-spine collar after confirming that c-spine is okay - clinically cleared

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4
Q

what are the causes of thoracolumbar spine fractures?

A

commonly due to high energy injuries can cause ‘wedge’ insufficiency fractures in elderly people with osteoporosis (treated symptomatically)

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5
Q

what indicates a need for surgery in someone with a thoracolumbar fracture?

A

a neurological deficit - esp. if it’s a progressive/very unstable injuryunstable injury pattern with a significant loss in vertebral height displacement or involvement of the posterior ligamentous structures

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6
Q

how are spinal cord injuries managed?

A

may need immobilisation - spinal board, cervical collar and sandbags surgery - to relieve pressure on cord/stabilise instable injuries can get special spinal beds which help prevent the development of pressure sores from paralysis may need ventilatory support if there is a loss of intercostal muscle function (T1-T12)

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7
Q

what can damage the spinal cord or nerve roots?

A

contusion (bruise) compression stretch laceration (deep cut/tear) vascular disruption and oedema can cause further ischaemic damage and hypotension can get 2ndry damage from hypoxia and inflammatory responses

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8
Q

what is spinal shock?

A

physiologic response to injury

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9
Q

How does spinal shock present?

A

complete loss of sensation and motor function loss of reflexes below the level of injury usually resolves within 24 hrs with return of reflexes

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10
Q

How do you know spinal shock is over?

A

the bulbocavernous reflex (contraction of the anal sphincter with either a squeeze of the glans penis or tapping the mons pubis or pulling on a ureteral catheter) is lost in spinal shock so when this comes back it can indicate the shock is over the extent of spinal injuries can often not be seen until the shock has left

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11
Q

what is neurogenic shock?

A

occurs 2ndry to temporary shutdown of sympathetic outflow from the cord from T1 to L2 usually due to injury in the cervical/upper thoracic leading to hypotension and bradycardia

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12
Q

how does neurogenic shock present?

A

hypotension and bradycardia (this resolves in within 24-48 hrs)priapism (persistent and painful erection of the penis - unopposed parasympathetic stimulation

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13
Q

how is neurogenic shock managed?

A

IV fluid therapy need to differentiate neurogenic shock from other forms of shock - hypovolaemic much more common in trauma & should respond to fluid replacement

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14
Q

signs of complete spinal cord injury

A

causes no sensory/voluntary motor function below the level of injury reflexes should return level of injury determined by the most distal spinal level with partial function - once there is resolution of the spinal shock partial function is determined by the presence of dermatomal sensation and myotomal skeletal muscle voluntary contraction poor prognosis for recovery

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15
Q

signs of incomplete spinal cord injury

A

some neurologic function (sensory &/or motor function) present distal to the level of injury greater the function present - faster the recovery is and better the prognosis

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16
Q

what indicates continuity of the corticospinal (motor) and spinothalamic (course, touch, pain, temp) tracts in an incomplete spinal cord injury?

A

sacral sparing (this is also indicative of incomplete injury rather than complete)preservation of perianal sensation voluntary anal sphincter contraction big toe flexion (FHL muscle, S1/2)

17
Q

incomplete spinal cord injuries

A

Central cord syndrome
Anterior cord syndrome Posterior cord syndrome
Brown-Sequard syndrome