| Literature DB >> 28057029 |
Daniel K Kornhall1,2,3, Jørgen Joakim Jørgensen4,5, Tor Brommeland6, Per Kristian Hyldmo7,8, Helge Asbjørnsen9,10, Thomas Dolven9, Thomas Hansen11, Elisabeth Jeppesen12,13.
Abstract
The traditional prehospital management of trauma victims with potential spinal injury has become increasingly questioned as authors and clinicians have raised concerns about over-triage and harm. In order to address these concerns, the Norwegian National Competence Service for Traumatology commissioned a faculty to provide a national guideline for pre-hospital spinal stabilisation. This work is based on a systematic review of available literature and a standardised consensus process. The faculty recommends a selective approach to spinal stabilisation as well as the implementation of triaging tools based on clinical findings. A strategy of minimal handling should be observed.Entities:
Keywords: Airway management; Guideline; Prehospital emergency care; Spinal cord injury; Stabilisation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28057029 PMCID: PMC5217292 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0345-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Overview of key clinical questions in the PICO format
| Clinical question | P | I | C | O |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Does routine use of spinal stabilisation prevent secondary neurological injury? | Trauma population | Spinal stabilisation | Stabilisation vs no stabilisation | Neurological morbidity |
| Are there alternative ways of stabilising the spinal column? | Trauma population | Spinal stabilisation | collar/MILS/stretcher/backboard | Neurological morbidity |
| Is there evidence of harmful side effects caused by stabilisation devices? | Trauma population | Spinal stabilisation | Stabilisation vs no stabilisation | Neurological morbidity |
| Are there sub-groups of patients that in particular should not be stabilised? | Critical injuries | No spinal stabilisation | Stabilisation vs no stabilisation | Neurological morbidity & mortality |
| How should patients with potential spinal injury be evacuated and transported? | Trauma population | Extrication & transport | Stretcher, vacuum mattress, backboard | Neurological morbidity & mortality |
PICO Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome
Summary of recommendations, quality of evidence and strength of recommendation
| Recommendation | Quality of evidence | Strength of recommendation | Rationale (Benefits, harms and the preferences of patients and clinicians) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Victims with potential spinal injury should have spinal stabilisation. | Very low | Strong | Paucity of literature supporting spinal stabilisation. Very little literature documenting serious harm. Spinal cord injury can have devastating consequences. Potential benefits outweigh harms |
| 2 | A minimal handling strategy should be observed. | Very low | Strong | Paucity of literature supporting spinal stabilisation. Very little literature documenting serious harm. Spinal cord injury can have devastating consequences. Potential benefits outweigh possible harms |
| 3 | Spinal stabilisation should never delay or preclude life-saving intervention in the critically injured trauma victim. | Very low | Good clinical practice | Literature supporting this recommendation was considered too heterogenous for synthesis. The faculty finds that it is logical that spinal stabilisation in the critically injured patient may cause serious harm |
| 4 | Victims of isolated penetrating injury should not be immobilised. | Moderate | Strong | One large study of moderate quality directly supports this recommendation. Spinal injury in patients with isolated penetrating injury is rare |
| 5 | Triaging tools based on clinical findings should be implemented. | Moderate | Strong | Consistent evidence supporting triaging tools based on clinical findings rather than mechanism. No harmful effects documented |
| 6 | Cervical stabilisation may be achieved using manual in-line stabilisation, head-blocks, a rigid collar or combinations thereof. | Very low | Conditional | Consistent experimental evidence demonstrating how rigid collars can stabilise the cervical spine. However, there is also evidence suggesting harm from rigid collars. No evidence proving superiority of any one method |
| 7 | Transfer from the ground or between stretchers should be achieved using a scoop stretcher. | Very low | Conditional | General paucity of evidence. Some evidence for significant spinal motion during log-roll. Some evidence documenting improved stability with scoop stretcher transfers. Safety of scoop stretcher systems is good. No harmful effects documented |
| 8 | Patients with potential spinal injury should be transported strapped supine on a vacuum mattress or on an ambulance stretcher system. | Very low | Conditional | Evidence supporting harm from hard surface stretcher systems. No consistent evidence demonstrating increased stability with any one method. Increased comfort associated with soft surface systems. No evidence exploring spinal stability of common stretcher systems |
| 9 | Hard surface stretcher systems may be used for transports of shorter duration only. | Very low | Conditional | Evidence supporting harm from hard surface stretcher systems. No consistent evidence demonstrating increased stability with any one method. Increased comfort associated with soft surface systems |
| 10 | Patients should under some circumstances be invited to self-extricate from vehicles. | Very low | Conditional | Two experimental studies demonstrating improved stability with self-extrication from vehicles. Reasonable and practical alternative as long as used cautiously |
Fig. 1Flowchart describing pre-hospital spinal stabilisation in patients with suspected spinal injury