| Literature DB >> 27781193 |
Michael James Hutton1, Robert A McGuire2, Robert Dunn3, Richard Williams4, Peter Robertson5, Bruce Twaddle6, Patrick Kiely7, Andrew Clarke8, Keyvan Mazda9, Paul Davies10, Krystle T Pagarigan11, Joseph R Dettori11.
Abstract
Study Design Systematic review. Objectives To determine the incidence of catastrophic cervical spine injuries (CCSIs) among elite athletes participating in contact team sports and whether the incidence varies depending on the use of protective gear or by player position. Methods Electronic databases and reference lists of key articles published from January 1, 2000, to January 29, 2016, were searched. Results Fourteen studies were included that reported CCSI in rugby (n = 10), American football (n = 3), and Irish hurling (n = 1). Among Rugby Union players, incidence of CCSI was 4.1 per 100,000 player-hours. Among National Football League players, the CCSI rate was 0.6 per 100,000 player-exposures. At the collegiate level, the CCSI rate ranged from 1.1 to 4.7 per 100,000 player-years. Mixed populations of elite and recreational rugby players in four studies report a CCSI rate of 1.4 to 7.2 per 100,000 player-years. In this same population, the scrum accounted for 30 to 51% of total reported CCSIs in Rugby Union versus 0 to 4% in Rugby League. The tackle accounted for 29 to 39% of injuries in Rugby Union and 78 to 100% of injuries in Rugby League. Making a tackle was responsible for 29 to 80% of injuries in American football. Conclusion CCSIs are infrequent among elite athletes. There is insufficient evidence to determine the effect of protective gear (e.g., helmets, padding) on CCSI incidence. Scrum and tackle in rugby and tackling in American football account for the majority of CCSIs in each respective sport.Entities:
Keywords: American football; cervical spinal cord injury; contact sport; hurling; quadriplegia; rugby
Year: 2016 PMID: 27781193 PMCID: PMC5077713 DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1586744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Spine J ISSN: 2192-5682
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing results of literature search.
Characteristics of included studies
| First author (year), study design | Sport (years), country | Injury definition; data source | Population at risk; data source | Results | Results by activity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elite adult rugby players only | |||||
| Bathgate (2002), | Rugby Union (1994–2000), Australia | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in neurologic deficit (n = 0) | Player-hours from 1994 to 2000; Australian Rugby Union team players (91 matches; 1,820.3 match hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of any catastrophic injury: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–135.4) | NR |
| Best (2005), | Rugby Union (2003), Australia | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in cervical dislocation ( | Player-hours during 48 matches of the 2003 RWC; 2003 RWC participants (no. players NR, 1,930 match hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of cervical dislocation | By activity, 2003: RWC, Rugby Union, scrum 1 (100%) |
| Brooks (2005), | Rugby Union (2002–2004), United Kingdom | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in neurologic deficit ( | Player-hours over two seasons; English Premiership Rugby Union players playing two seasons (546 players, 16,782 match hours and 196,409 training hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of any catastrophic injury: match: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–14.7); training: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–1.3) | NR |
| Fuller (2008), | Rugby Union (2007), France | Catastrophic cervical SCI = resulting in permanent neurologic deficit ( | Player-hours during the 2007 IRB World Cup; 2007 IRB World Cup participants (626 players, 1,920 match hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of any catastrophic injury: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–128.3) | NR |
| Fuller (2013), | Rugby Union (2011), New Zealand | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in neurologic deficit ( | Player-hours during the 2011 IRB World Cup; 2011 IRB World Cup participants (615 players, 1,920 match hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of any catastrophic injury: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–128.3) | NR |
| Schick (2008), | Rugby Union (2006), Canada | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in quadriplegia ( | Player-hours during the 2006 Women's Rugby World Cup; 2006 Women's Rugby World Cup participants (339 players, 5,551 match hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of any catastrophic injury: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–128.3) | NR |
| All elite and recreational rugby players | |||||
| Berry (2006), | Rugby Union or League (1986–2003), Australia | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in complete or incomplete tetraplegia ( | No. of players/y; ARU reports (annual no. players ranged from 22,020 to 35,917 over years of study) | Annual incidence (per 100,000 player-years) of tetraplegia: 1986–1991: Rugby Union: 9.2 (95% CI: 4.9–15.7), Rugby League: 2.3 (95% CI: 1.1–4.1); 1995–2003: Rugby Union: 6.8 (95% CI: 4.9–10.7), Rugby League: 1.7 (95% CI: 0.9–2.9) | By activity, 1986–2003 |
| Bohu (2009), | Rugby Union (1997–2006), France | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in ASIA A–D ( | No. of players/y; French Rugby Union (no. players ranged from 189,628 to 241,173 over years of study) | Annual incidence | By activity, 1997–2006: Rugby Union, scrum 19 (51%), ruck, maul, or tackle: 18 (49%) |
| Brown (2013), | Rugby Union (2008–2011), South Africa | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in any permanent catastrophic injury, including death, quadriplegia, or neurologic deficit (some deficit remains) ( | No. of participants in the senior age group (older than under-19)/y; estimate from World Rugby Organization (121,663 annual participants) | Annual incidence (per 100,000 player-years) of any catastrophic injury: 4.5 (95% CI: 0.7–8.3); death: 0.6 (95% CI: 0.0–2.0); quadriplegia: 1.9 (95% CI: 0.0–4.3); neurologic deficit: 2.1 (95% CI: 0.0–4.6) | By activity, 2008–2011 |
| Carmody (2005) | Adult Rugby Union or League (1997–2002), Australia | Catastrophic cervical ASCIR resulting Frankel grade A–E ( | No. of registered players/y; Australian Rugby Union and League governing bodies | Annual incidence | By activity, 1997–2002: Rugby Union, scrum 7 (30%), tackle 9 (39%), maul/ruck 6 (26%), unspecified: 1 (4%); Rugby League, scrum 0 (0%), tackle 10 (100%) |
| Elite American football players | |||||
| Mueller (2012) | Football (College) (2000–2012), USA | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in quadriplegia or quadriparesis | No. of players/y; data source estimate not stated (75,000 annual participants used) | Annual incidence | By activity, 2000–2012 |
| Boden (2006), | Football (College) (1989–2002), USA | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in any catastrophic injury or quadriplegia (any catastrophic: n = 46; quadriplegia: n = 8) | No. of players/y; National Collegiate Athletic Association, the National Junior College Athletic Association, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, and the Christian Colleges (75,000 annual participants used) | Annual incidence (per 100,000 player-years) of any catastrophic injury: 4.7 (95% CI: 3.4–6.1); quadriplegia: 1.1 (95% CI: 0.3–1.4) | By activity, 1989–2012 |
| Mall (2012), | Football (NFL) (2000–2010), USA | Spinal cord injury ( | Total game (386,688) and practice (1,947,750) exposures, 2000–2010 | Annual incidence per 100,000 athlete exposures of any catastrophic injury: 0.60 (95% CI: 0.38–0.91) | By activity, 2000–2010: football, making tackle 4 (28.6%), being tackled 3 (21.4%), blocking 2 (14.3%), being blocked 2 (14.3%), other collision 2 (14.3%), unknown 1 (7.1%) |
| Elite hurling players | |||||
| Murphy (2012), | Hurling (2007), Ireland | Catastrophic cervical SCI resulting in permanent neurologic deficit ( | Player-hours during 2007 Irish hurling season; National Hurling League players (127 players, 17,254 match and training hours) | Incidence (per 100,000 player-hours) of any catastrophic injury: 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0–14.3) | NR |
Abbreviations: ARU, Australian Rugby Union; ASCIR, Australian Spinal Cord Injury Register; ASIA, American Spinal Injury Association; CI, confidence interval; IRB, International Rugby League; N/A, not applicable; NCCSIR, National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research; NFL, National Football League (USA); NNR, number not reported; NR, not reported; RWC, Rugby World Cup; SCI, spinal cord injury.
No permanent injuries were reported; only two cases of nonserious, temporary cervical cord neuropraxia and brachial neuropraxia.
No mention of spinal cord injury. The overall incidence if this dislocation did not result in permanent spinal cord injury would be 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0 to 127.7) per 100,000 player-hours.
Verified by personal correspondence with corresponding authors on January 25, 2016,12 February 1, 2016,8 10 11 18 and February 5, 2016.17
The ASCIR was established in 1995 by the National Injury Surveillance Unit of the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. It collects data from the six Australian spinal units on acute spinal cord injury from all causes in which patient consent is obtained. The ASCIR is audited quarterly by comparison with spinal unit records, and missing data is followed up. Due to lack of funding, some cases were missed from 1992 to 1994. Validated against data with two similar studies in Australia in the 1990s based on a review of insurance claims records and a review of medical records.
Years 1992 to 1994 omitted due to likely incompleteness.
Validated against Rugby-Espoir-Solidarité, an association involving rugby players suffering from a disabling injury in rugby.
Population includes junior players as young as 12 years old.
Joint initiative between the South African Rugby Union (http://www.sarugby.co.za) and the Chris Burger/Petro Jackson Player's Fund.
Estimated from graph.
Two spinal cord injuries were thoracolumbar in origin, which are included in these incidence rates.
“Others” includes the following studies: Cantu and Mueller (1990)19; Cantu and Mueller (2000)20; Cantu and Mueller (2003)21; Mueller and Cantu (1991).22
Deaths not included; yearly follow-up not done, thus neurologic status refers to when the athlete is entered into registry.
Data complied with the assistance of college coaches, athletic directors, school administrators, physicians, athletic trainers, executive officers of state and national athletic organizations, sporting goods dealers and manufacturers' representatives, online search engines, and professional associates of the researchers.
Incidence by decade calculated from the numbers in the annual report, Tables 1 and 2.
Proportions of injury by activity given by study for high school and college combined.
Any catastrophe defined by author as spinal column disruption, neve root avulsion, neurologic deficit, or transient neurologic symptoms in at least two extremities.
Game and practice exposures included the following: preseason training camp, four preseason games, games played during the regular 17-week season, and the postseason playoffs. Injuries occurring during individual, off-season training, and extra preseason practices are not included in these exposure counts.
Incidence rate of catastrophic cervical spine injury among elite Rugby Union players during match play
| Study (year) | Duration | Country | Design | Setting | Catastrophic injuries | Hours at risk | Incidence (95% CI) per 100,000 player-hours |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bathgate (2002) | 1994–2000 | Australia | Prospective | 91 matches | 0 | 1,820 | 0.0 (0.0–135.8) |
| Brooks (2005) | 2002–2004 | United Kingdom | Prospective | 2 seasons | 0 | 16,782 | 0.0 (0.0–14.7) |
| Best (2005) | 2003 | Australia | Prospective | World Cup | 1 | 1,930 | 51.8 (4.7–241.6) |
| Fuller (2008) | 2007 | France | Prospective | World Cup | 0 | 1,920 | 0.0 (0.0–128.3) |
| Fuller (2013) | 2011 | New Zealand | Prospective | World Cup | 0 | 1,920 | 0.0 (0.0–128.3) |
| Overall | 1 | 24,372 | 4.1 (0.4–19.1) |
Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval.
Defined as a cervical dislocation, but no mention of spinal cord injury. The overall incidence if this dislocation did not result in permanent spinal cord injury would be 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0 to 10.1) per 100,000 player-hours.
Fig. 2Incidence risk of catastrophic cervical spine injury in a mixed population of elite and recreational rugby players.
Proportion of catastrophic cervical spine injuries in a mixed population of elite and recreational rugby players by rugby activity
| Study (year) | Scrum | Tackle | Maul or ruck | Collision/fall | Unspecified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rugby Union | |||||
| Berry (2006) | 35% (11/31) | 29% (9/31) | 16% (5/31) | 7% (2/31) | 13% |
| Brown (2013) | 50% (11/22) | 32% (7/22) | 9% (2/22) | 5% (1/22) | 5% |
| Bohu (2009) | 51% (19/37) | 49% | – | – | |
| Carmody (2005) | 30% (7/23) | 39% (9/23) | 26% (6/23) | – | 4% (1/23) |
| Rugby League | |||||
| Berry (2006) | 4% (1/23) | 78% (18/23) | N/A | 13% (3/23) | 4% |
| Carmody (2005) | 0% (0/10) | 100% (10/10) | 0% (0/10) | – | – |
Abbreviation: N/A, not available.
Likely overlap in data between Berry (2006)6 and Carmody (2005).13
Event responsible for injury was “unclear.”
Comprised of maul, ruck, or tackle.
Proportion of catastrophic cervical spine injuries among American football players by activity
| Study (year) | Making tackle (%) | Being tackled (%) | Blocking (%) | Being blocked (%) | Other (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Football League (NFL) | 29 | 21 | 14 | 14 | 21 |
| Collegiate football | |||||
| Mueller (2012) | 67 | 10 | 5 | 1 | 17 |
| Boden (2006) | 80 | 10 | 6 | – | 4 |
Quality of evidence evaluating catastrophic cervical spine injuries
| Outcome | Studies ( | Serious risk of bias | Serious inconsistency | Serious indirectness | Serious imprecision | Incidence rate (95% CI) | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key question 1, incidence rate | |||||||
| Elite athletes only | |||||||
| Rugby Union (per 100,000 player-hours) | 5 | No | No | No | Yes (−1) | 4.1 (0.4–19.1) | Moderate |
| American NFL football (per 100,000 player-exposures | 1 | No | Unknown | No | Yes (−1) | 0.6 (0.4–0.9) | High |
| American Collegiate football (per 100,000 player-years) | 2 | Yes (−1) | No | No | No | Range: 1.1 (0.05–5.8) to 4.7 (3.4–6.1) | Moderate |
| Elite and recreational athletes | |||||||
| Rugby Union (per 100,000 player-years) | 4 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Range: 1.4 (0.4–3.8) to 7.2 (NR) | Very low |
| Rugby League (per 100,000 player-years) | 2 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Range 1.7 (0.9–2.9) to 5.0 (NR) | Very low |
| Key question 2, protected versus unprotected | |||||||
| No comparisons available | No data | ||||||
| Key question 3, sporting activity associated with CCSI | |||||||
| Rugby Union, scrum | 4 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Yes (−1) | Range: 30–51% | Low |
| Rugby Union, tackle | 3 | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | Range: 29–39% | Low |
| Rugby Union, maul or ruck | 3 | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | Range: 9–26% | Low |
| Rugby League, scrum | 2 | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | Range: 0–4% | Low |
| Rugby League, tackle | 2 | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | Range: 78–100% | Low |
| American football, making tackle | 3 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Unknown | Range: 28.6–79.7% | Low |
| American football, being tackled | 3 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Unknown | Range: 10.1% (NNR) to 21.4% (3/14) | Low |
| American football, blocking | 3 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Unknown | Range: 4.6–14.3% | Low |
| American football, being blocked | 2 | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Unknown | Range: 1.2–14.3% | Low |
Abbreviations: CCSI, catastrophic cervical spine injury; CI, confidence interval; NFL, National Football League; NNR, number not reported; NR, not reported.
This total rate assumes that the single reported cervical dislocation resulted in a permanent spinal cord injury. If none occurred, the incidence rate would be 0.0 (95% CI: 0.0 to 10.1) per 100,000 player-hours.
A player-exposure was a game or a practice session.
For rugby, all data from studies that included elite and recreational athletes; for football, all data included collegiate level players.
Downgraded for small sample size.
Fig. 3Radiograph revealed a fracture dislocation of the C5-C6 level.
Fig. 4Lateral computed tomography scan at the time of injury showed significant compromise of the spinal canal.
Fig. 5Immediate postoperative lateral radiograph reveals good realignment and fixation of the C5-C6 fracture dislocation.
Fig. 6T1-weighted magnetic resonance image (MRI) postoperatively reveals significant cord injury at the level of the fracture dislocation.
Fig. 7T2-weighted MRI reveals injury to the cord extending from C4 to C7.
Fig. 8Lateral cervical radiograph one year postoperatively reveals good healing.
Fig. 9Lateral cervical spine radiograph confirming bilateral C5–C6 facet dislocation.
Fig. 10(A, B) A prereduction T2-weighted and short tau inversion recovery sequence magnetic resonance imaging with persistent C5–C6 dislocation leading to high-grade cord impingement with cord signal changes and extensive posterior ligamentous injury.
Fig. 11(A, B) Left- and right-sided parasagittal reformatted computed tomography scans confirm bilateral facet dislocation with a left-sided perched facet and a complete dislocation contralaterally.
Fig. 12(A, B) Axial computed tomography and an angiogram show an occluded right-sided vertebral artery from the C5 level rostrally.
Fig. 13(A, B) Cranial magnetic resonance imaging shows infarcts in cerebellum and posterior cortex of the right hemisphere.