| Literature DB >> 23519239 |
Hao Wang1, Marco Coppola, Richard D Robinson, James T Scribner, Veer Vithalani, Carrie E de Moor, Raj R Gandhi, Mandy Burton, Kathleen A Delaney.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been found that significantly different clinical outcomes occur in trauma patients with different mechanisms of injury. Ground level falls (GLF) are usually considered "minor trauma" with less injury occurred in general. However, it is not uncommon that geriatric trauma patients sustain cervical spine (C-spine) fractures with other associated injuries due to GLF or less. The aim of this study is to determine the injury patterns and the roles of clinical risk factors in these geriatric trauma patients.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol; Cervical spine fracture; Geriatric; Ground level fall; Trauma
Year: 2013 PMID: 23519239 PMCID: PMC3601504 DOI: 10.4021/jocmr1227w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med Res ISSN: 1918-3003
Clinical Characteristics of Trauma Patients With Cervical Spine Fractures
| Geriatric Trauma Patients | Non-geriatric Trauma Patients | P | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (Mean ± SD) | 78.02 ± 8.52 | 37.15 ± 13.69 | < 0.001 |
| (95%CI 76.59 - 79.45) | (95%CI 36.04 - 38.26) | ||
| Gender (% Male) | 56.83% (79/139) | 74.11% (435/587) | < 0.001 |
| Mechanism | |||
| MVC | 40.29% (56/139) | 79.56% (467/587) | |
| Fall | 53.96% (75/139) | 12.44% (73/587) | |
| Assault | 1.44% (2/139) | 2.39% (14/587) | |
| Others* | 4.32%(6/139) | 5.62% (33/139) | < 0.001 |
SD: standard deviation; MVC: motor vehicle collision; * Others: including E-code 805.2 (pedestrian hit by rolling stock), 807.8 (railway accident of unspecified nature injuring other specified person), 826.1 (pedal cycle accident), 910.9 (accidental drown/submersion), 916.0 (struck accident by falling objects), 918.0 (caught accidentally in or between objects), 919.2 (machinery accident), 925.2 (accident electric current - industrial wires/appliance/machinery), and 958.8 (suicidal/self injury-hanging), etc. Basic characteristics of trauma patients with C-spine fractures. Geriatric trauma patients tended to have male in predominance (P < 0.001), sustain more C-spine injuries due to fall, whereas in non-geriatric patients C-spine injuries mainly occurred from MVC (P < 0.001).
Type and Distribution of C-Spine Fractures in Trauma Patients
| Location of C-spine Fractures | Trauma Patients with C-spine Fracture | Trauma Patient with C-spine Fracture due to GLF | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geriatric Trauma Patients | Non-geriatric Trauma Patients | P | Geriatric Trauma Patients | Non-geriatric Trauma Patients | P | |
| n = 139 | n = 587 | n = 35 | n = 18 | |||
| C1 | 38 (27.34%) | 80 (13.63%) | < 0.001 | 16 (45.71%) | 5 (27.78%) | 0.206 |
| C2 | 75 (53.96%) | 129 (21.98%) | < 0.001 | 20 (57.14%) | 3 (16.67%) | 0.005 |
| C3 | 11 (7.91%) | 47 (8.01%) | 0.971 | 4 (11.43%) | 3 (16.67%) | 0.594 |
| C4 | 18 (12.95%) | 78 (13.29%) | 0.916 | 6 (17.14%) | 6 (33.33%) | 0.182 |
| C5 | 15 (10.79%) | 110 (18.74%) | 0.026 | 4 (11.43%) | 5 (27.78%) | 0.133 |
| C6 | 19 (13.67%) | 188 (32.03%) | < 0.001 | 2 (5.71%) | 2 (11.11%) | 0.481 |
| C7 | 26 (18.71%) | 243 (41.40%) | < 0.001 | 2 (5.71%) | 0 (0%) | 0.301 |
| Single C-spine fracture | 94 (67.63%) | 378 (64.40%) | 0.473 | 19 (54.29%) | 15 (83.33%) | 0.037 |
Different type and distribution of C-spine fractures in trauma patients. Among all trauma patients with C-spine fractures, geriatric patients tended to sustain more C1 and C2 fractures than non-geriatric patients (P < 0.001), whereas non-geriatric patients tended to sustain more C6 and C7 fractures (P < 0.001). Similar results showed on patients with C-spine fracture due to GLF with more non-geriatric patients sustained single C-spine fracture.
Associated Injuries With C-Spine Fractures in Trauma Patients due to GLF or Less
| Geriatric Patients | Non-geriatric Patients | P | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 35) | (n = 18) | ||
| Gender (Male) | 13 (37.14%) | 14 (77.78%) | 0.005 |
| Upper C-spine fractures | 26 (74.29%) | 7 (38.89%) | 0.012 |
| ICP | 7 (20%) | 0 | 0.042 |
| Clavicle fractures | 0 | 1 (5.56%) | 0.159 |
| Facial/skull fractures | 3 (8.57%) | 4 (22.22%) | 0.165 |
| GCS (mean ± SD, 95%CI) | 14.4 ± 1.8 (13.8 - 15.1) | 14 ± 2.2 (12.8 - 15.1) | 0.450 |
| Rib fractures | 1 (2.86%) | 0 | 0.469 |
| Hip/femur fractures | 2 (5.71%) | 2 (11.11%) | 0.481 |
| Facial laceration/abrasion | 14 (40%) | 7 (38.89%) | 0.938 |
ICP: intracranial pathology; GCS: Glasgow Coma Scale; GLF: ground level fall; SD: standard deviation; CI: confidence interval; Upper C-spine fractures: C1, C2 spine fractures. The associated injuries with C-spine fractures in trauma patients due to GLF. Geriatric patients with C-spine fractures tended to occur more in female, sustained more fractures in upper C-spine, and co-existed more with ICP than non-geriatric patients (P < 0.05). The occurrence of other injuries showed no significant difference (P > 0.05).
Figure 1Flow diagram of trauma patients with cervical spine fractures. Among all trauma patients, 5.67% (726/12,805) patients had sustained C-spine fracture(s) and 19.15% (139/726) of C-spine fracture patients were geriatric. Furthermore, approximately half of these geriatric patients obtained C-spine fractures due to fall.
Intracranial Pathology (ICP) and C-Spine Fractures in Trauma Patients due to GLF
| Geriatric Trauma Patients due to GLF (n = 504) | Non-geriatric Trauma Patients due to GLF (n = 1,128) | P | |
|---|---|---|---|
| C-spine fractures | 35 (6.94%) | 18 (1.59%) | < 0.001 |
| ICP | 32 (6.34%) | 36 (3.19%) | 0.0049 |
| C-spine fracture and ICP | 7 (1.38%) | 0 (0%) | < 0.001 |
The occurrence of ICP and C-spine fracture in trauma patients due to GLF. It indicated that geriatric trauma patients tended to sustain not only C-spine fractures but also ICP as well. Additionally, only ICP and C-spine fracture co-existed in geriatric trauma patients due to GLF in this study (P < 0.001).
Logistic Regression Analysis of Risk Factors of Head Injury in Trauma Patients With C-Spine Fractures due to GLF
| Risk Factors | Adjusted Odds Ratio | P | 95% Confidence Interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper C-spine fractures | 0.04 | 0.076 | 0.00 - 1.39 |
| GCS | 0.73 | 0.360 | 0.38 - 1.41 |
| Age | 1.17 | 0.031 | 1.01 - 1.35 |
| Gender (male) | 91.57 | 0.038 | 1.29 - 6,472.43 |
| Facial Laceration/abrasion | 0.10 | 0.219 | 0.00 - 3.90 |
| Facial Fractures | 0.45 | 0.639 | 0.01 - 12.29 |
| Femur Fractures | 3.17 | 0.504 | 0.10 - 94.40 |
Upper C-spine fractures including C1 and C2 fractures, GCS: Glasgow Coma Scale, Facial fractures including skull fractures. The results of logistic regression analysis. Potential risk factors that could predict the co-injury patterns of C-spine fracture and intracranial pathology in trauma patients were analyzed and adjusted odds ratios were showed. Two clinical variables (age and male gender) were considered independent risk factors to predict this co-injury pattern in trauma patients.
List of C-Spine Trauma Patients With Intracranial Pathology due to GLF
| Age | Gender | ICP | C-spine Fractures | GCS | Other injuries | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 65 | Male | SDH, SAH | C5 | 14 | N/A |
| 2 | 79 | Male | SDH, SAH | C2 | 14 | Femur Fracture |
| 3 | 93 | Male | EDH | C1 | 15 | N/A |
| 4 | 86 | Male | SDH | C3 | 15 | Facial laceration/abrasion |
| 5 | 76 | Male | SDH | C7 | 15 | Facial Fractures |
| 6 | 88 | Female | SDH | C2 | 14 | Facial laceration/abrasion |
| 7 | 86 | Male | SAH | C4 | 14 | N/A |
ICP: intracranial pathology; SDH: subdural hemorrhage; SAH: subarachnoid hemorrhage; EDH: epidural hemorrhage; GCS: Glasgow coma scale. The list of all C-spine fracture patients with associated ICP. All patients sustained C-spine fractures due to GLF. Their mean ages were 81.85 ± 9.33 and 85.7% (6/7) were male. None of these patients had GCS < 14.
The Role of Alcohol in C-Spine Fracture Trauma Patients due to GLF
| Blood Alcohol Level (mg/dL) | Geriatric Trauma Patient | Non-geriatric Trauma Patient |
|---|---|---|
| n = 31 | n = 17 | |
| < 80 mg/dL | 30 | 8 |
| 80 - 200 mg/dL* | 1 | 2 |
| ≥ 200 mg/dL | 0 | 7 |
*Not including 200 mg/dL. P < 0.001. The results of blood alcohol level (BAL) in trauma patients due to GLF. Only 48 patients had BAL recorded in trauma registry data. From these 48 patients, only one patient from geriatric group had toxic BAL, whereas over 50% of non-geriatric trauma patients had elevated BAL (P < 0.001).