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TRAUMA SARAF SPINAL TRAUMA SARAF SPINAL TRAUMA SARAF SPINAL TRAUMA SARAF SPINAL Wiryawan Manusubroto SpB,SpBS(K) SMF Bedah Saraf RSUP dr Sardjito
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Trauma Saraf Spinal

May 21, 2017

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Page 1: Trauma Saraf Spinal

TRAUMA SARAF SPINALTRAUMA SARAF SPINALTRAUMA SARAF SPINALTRAUMA SARAF SPINALWiryawan Manusubroto

SpB,SpBS(K)SMF Bedah Saraf RSUP dr Sardjito

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INTRODUCTIONINTRODUCTION

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ANATOMY PHYSIOLOGYANATOMY PHYSIOLOGY

Spinal cord ends at L1

Three tracts can be readily assessed clinically.- The corticospinal tract- The spinothalamic tract- The spinothalamic tract- The posterior columns

Complete spinal cord injury: no sensory or motor function below a certain level, Incomplete spinal cord injury: If any motor or sensory function remains, prognosis for recovery is much better.

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– Thoracic and lumbar levels supply sympathetic nervous system fibers

– Cervical and sacral – Cervical and sacral levels supply parasympathetic nervous system fibers

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Dermatomes and Dermatomes and MyotomeMyotome

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PATHOLOGY OF SCIPATHOLOGY OF SCI

� Primary Injury ◦ occurs at the time of injury

◦ may result in

� Secondary Injury◦ occurs after initial injury

◦ may result from◦ may result in � cord compression

� direct cord injury

� interruption in cord blood supply

◦ may result from� swelling/inflammation

� ischemia

� movement of body fragments

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� Cord transection◦ Complete

� all tracts disrupted

� cord mediated functions below transection are permanently lost

CLINICAL CLASSIFICATIONCLINICAL CLASSIFICATION

permanently lost

� determined ~ 24 hours post injury

� possible results◦ quadriplegia

◦ paraplegia

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� Cord transection◦ Complete

� all tracts disrupted

� cord mediated functions below transection are permanently lostpermanently lost

� determined ~ 24 hours post injury

� possible results◦ quadriplegia

◦ paraplegia

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� Cord transection◦ Incomplete

� some tracts and cord mediated functions remain intact

� potential for recovery of � potential for recovery of function

� Possible syndromes◦ Brown-Sequard Syndrome

◦ Anterior Cord Syndrome

◦ Central Cord Syndrome

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� Incomplete Cord Injury◦ Injury to one side of the cord (Hemisection)

◦ Often due to penetrating injury or vertebral dislocation

Brown Brown SequardSequard SyndromeSyndrome

dislocation

◦ Complete damage to all spinal tracts on affected side

◦ Prognosis for recovery is variable

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� Exam Findings◦ Ipsilateral loss of motor function motion, position, vibration, and light touch

◦ Contralateral loss of

Brown Brown SequardSequard SyndromeSyndrome

◦ Contralateral loss of sensation to pain and temperature

◦ Bladder and bowel dysfunction (usually short term)

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� Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome◦ Supplies the anterior 2/3 of the spinal cord to the upper thoracic region

Anterior Cord SyndromeAnterior Cord Syndrome

region

◦ caused by bony fragments or pressure on spinal arteries

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� Exam Findings◦ Variable loss of motor function and sensitivity to pinprick and temperature

◦ loss of motor function and sensation to pain, temperature

Anterior Cord SyndromeAnterior Cord Syndrome

pain, temperature and light touch

◦ Proprioception (position sense) and vibration are preserved

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� Usually occurs with a hyperextension of the cervical region

� Exam Findings◦ weakness or paresthesias in upper

Central Cord SyndromeCentral Cord Syndrome

paresthesias in upper extremities but normal strength in lower extremities

◦ varying degree of bladder dysfunction

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� Injury to nerves withinthe spinal cord as theyexit the lumbar andsacral regions◦ Usually fractures below L2

◦ Specific dysfunction depends on level of injury

� Exam Findings

CaudaCauda EquinaEquina SyndromeSyndrome

� Exam Findings◦ Flaccid-type paralysis oflower body

◦ Bladder and bowel impairment

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� Temporary loss of autonomic function of the cord at the level of injury

◦ Usually results from cervical or high thoracic injury

� Effects may be temporary and resolve in hours to weeks

� Presentation

◦ Flaccid paralysis distal to injury site

◦ Loss of autonomic function

� hypotension or relative hypotension

NeurogenicNeurogenic ShockShock

� hypotension or relative hypotension

� vasodilation

� loss of bladder and bowel control

� priapism

� loss of thermoregulation

� warm, pink, dry below injury site

� relative bradycardia

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Effect on other Effect on other Organ SystemsOrgan Systems

� Hypoventilation due to the paralysis:�Intercostal muscles�Diaphragm

� The inability to perceive pain may mask a � The inability to perceive pain may mask a potentially serious injury elsewhere: ◦ Abdominal injury – no abdominal tenderness◦ Lower extremity injury

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� Compression

� Flexion

� Extension

� Rotation

� Lateral bending

Distraction

Mechanism Of InjuryMechanism Of Injury( High Energy )( High Energy )

� Distraction

� Penetration

� Rearback - Fall > 10 feet

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� ABCs�Airway and/or Breathing � Inability to maintain airway

� Apnea

� Diaphragmatic breathing

� Cardiovascular impairment

� Shock◦ Hypotension and or bradycardia

GENERAL ASSESMENTGENERAL ASSESMENT

◦ Hypotension and or bradycardia◦ Patient appears warm and dry

� Hypoperfusion

� Level of consciousness

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� Inspection and palpation: Occiput to Coccyx◦ Tenderness to the vertebrae◦ Gap or Step-off (both very rare)◦ Edema and bruising◦ Spasm of associated muscles

� Neurological assessment◦ Motor ◦ Sensation

CLINICAL EVALUATIONCLINICAL EVALUATION

◦ Motor ◦ Sensation◦ Reflexes

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� NEXUS Criteria:1. Absence of tenderness in the posterior midline

2. Absence of a neurological deficit3. Normal level of alertness (GCS score = 15)

NEXUSNEXUS

15)4. No evidence of intoxication (drugs or alcohol)

5. No distracting injury/pain

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� Any patient who fulfilled all 5 of the criteria were considered low risk for C-spine injury and as such did not need C-spine radiography

� For patients who had any of the 5 criteria,radiographic imaging was indicated in

NEXUSNEXUS

radiographic imaging was indicated in theform of AP, lateral, and odontoid C-spine views

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Imaging OptionsImaging Options

� Initial Screening Options:◦ Plain films– Lateral, AP, and Odontoid, � Optional: Oblique and Swimmer’s (if necessary)

◦ CT- much better than plain films for bony fractures/dislocations. Poor evaluation of ligamentous injuries.

� Other cervical spine imaging options◦ MRI- Very good for soft tissue/ligamentousinjuries.

◦ Flexion-Extension Plain Films- to determine stability (may replace MRI if unavailable or contraindicated)

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AP/LATERAL/SPECIAL VIEWAP/LATERAL/SPECIAL VIEW

� Anterior subluxation of one vertebra on another indicates facet dislocation

� Less than 50% of the width of a vertebral body implies unifacet dislocationof a vertebral body implies unifacet dislocation

� Greater than 50% implies bilateral facet dislocation

� This is usually accompanied by widening of the interspinous and interlaminar spaces

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X-ray Guidelines (cervical)

Mnemonic AABBCDS

� Adequacy, Alignment

� Bone abnormality, Base of skull

� Cartilage,

� Disc space

Soft tissue

Radiological EvaluationRadiological Evaluation

� Soft tissue

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� Thin cut CT scanning should be used to evaluate abnormal, suspicious or poorly visualized areas on plain radiology

� The combination of

CT ScanningCT Scanning

� The combination of plain radiology and directed CT scanning provides a false negative rate of less than 0.1%

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� Ideally all patients with an abnormal neurological examination should be evaluated with an MRI scan

� Patients who report transient neurological

MRIMRI

transient neurological symptoms but who have a normal exam should also undergo an MRI assessment of their spinal cord

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Spinal injuries can be described as,� Fractures � Fracture dislocations� SCIWORA � Penetrating injuriesInjuries can be stable or unstable

MorphologyMorphology

Injuries can be stable or unstableAll patients with x-ray evidence of injury and all those with neurologic deficits should be considered to have an unstable spinal injury until proven otherwise.

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Stable Stable vsvs Unstable Fractures Unstable Fractures

� Stability of cervical spine is provided by two functional vertical columns◦ Anterior column: vertebral bodies, the disc spaces, the anterior and posterior longitudinal ligaments and annulus fibrosusligaments and annulus fibrosus

◦ Posterior column: pedicles, facets and apophyseal joints, laminar spinous processes and the posterior ligament complex

� As long as one column is intact the injury is stable.

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� Primary Goal◦ Prevent secondary injury

� Stabilization of the spine begins in the initial assessment◦ Treat the spine as a long bone

MANAGEMENT OF CORDMANAGEMENT OF CORD

◦ Treat the spine as a long bone

� Secure joint above and below

◦ Caution with “partial” spine splinting

� Immobilization vs Motion Restriction

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� General Precaution◦ Spinal Motion Restriction: immobilization devices

◦ ABCs

� Increase FiO2

� Assist ventilations as needed with cervical spine control

� Indications for intubation:acute respiratory failure, Glasgow score <9, increased respiratory rate with hypoxia, PCO2 score <9, increased respiratory rate with hypoxia, PCO2 more than 50, and vital capacity less than 10 mL/kg

� IV Access & fluids titrated to BP ~ 90-100 mm Hg

◦ Look for other injuries: “Life over Limb”

◦ Transport to appropriate SCI center once stabilized

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� Consider High Dose methylprednisolone: ◦ 30 mg/kg bolus over 15 mins

◦ After bolus: infusion 5.4mg/kg IV for 23 hours

◦ Controversial as recent evidence questions benefitbenefit

◦ Must be started < 8 hours of injury

◦ Most spine surgeons do not use for penetrating trauma

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TRAUMA : MECHANISM ?

ABC AND D

PEX

ALERT

‘UNCONSIOUSNESS’

( NEED ICU/INTUBATED)

D

FLOWCHART FLOWCHART 11

CARDINAL SSX-

NO NEED IMAGING

A

SSX+

(IF PLEGIA , DISTINCT FROM SPINAL SHOCK)

B

D

SSX IS UNCLEAR

CLARIFY !

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SSX+

( > + 1 )

IMAGING

AP,LAT,SPESIFIC

PLAIN X RAY

PLAIN X RAY

FLOW CHART BFLOW CHART B

PLAIN X RAY NEGATIF

PLAIN X RAY POSITIF

C

CLEARENCEBY EXPERT/CT/MRI

STABEL UNSTABEL

VASCULAR PROBLEM ?

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STABEL

IS DECOMPRESSION

NEEDED

UNSTABEL

STABILIZING

FLOWCHART CFLOWCHART C

STABILIZING IS PURSUIT DEPEND

ON LAST CONDITION OF

STABILITY

DECOMPRESSION IF NEEDED

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ENTIRE SPINAL EVALUATION

� AP/LAT CERVICAL

� 3 D CT CERVICAL-THORACAL

� AP/LAT THORACOLUMBAR

FLOWCHART DFLOWCHART D

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Points to Remember:Points to Remember:

� Maintain cervical spine immobilization until spine properly evaluated

� Criteria exist (NEXUS ) that identify the need for cervical spine imaging◦ Patients negative for either criteria may ◦ Patients negative for either criteria may have their spine clinically cleared

� Screen patients with plain radiograph or CT◦ CT better than plain radiographs

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MATUR NUWUNMATUR NUWUN