| Literature DB >> 31426850 |
Christian Maschmann1,2,3, Elisabeth Jeppesen4,5, Monika Afzali Rubin6,7, Charlotte Barfod8.
Abstract
Traumatic spinal cord injury is a relatively rare injury in Denmark but may result in serious neurological consequences. For decades, prehospital spinal stabilisation with a rigid cervical collar and a hard backboard has been considered to be the most appropriate procedure to prevent secondary spinal cord injuries during patient transportation. However, the procedure has been questioned in recent years, due to the lack of high-quality studies supporting its efficacy. A national interdisciplinary task force was therefore established to provide updated clinical guidelines on prehospital procedures for spinal stabilisation of adult trauma patients in Denmark. The guidelines are based on a systematic review of the literature and grading of the evidence, in addition to a standardised consensus process.This process yielded five main recommendations:A strong recommendation against spinal stabilisation of patients with isolated penetrating trauma; a weak recommendation against the prehospital use of a rigid cervical collar and a hard backboard for ABCDE-stable patients; and a weak recommendation for the use of a vacuum mattress for patient transportation. Finally, our group recommends the use of our clinical algorithm to ensure good clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Blunt trauma; Guideline; Immobilisation; Penetrating trauma; Rigid cervical collar; Spinal stabilisation; Spineboard; Trauma; Traumatic spinal cord injury; Vacuum mattress
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31426850 PMCID: PMC6700785 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-019-0655-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Members of the Danish interdisciplinary working group
| Members of the Danish interdisciplinary working group | |
• Danish Society for Emergency Medicine – DASEM (chairman) • Danish Neurosurgical Society – DNKS • Danish Society for Spinal Surgery – DRKS • Danish Orthopaedic Society - DOS • Danish Orthopaedic Trauma Society – DOTS • Danish Society for Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine – DASAIM • Danish Society for Radiology - DRS • Danish Society for Ambulance- and Paramedicine – DSAP • ATLS® Denmark • PHTLS® Denmark • ITLS® Denmark • Greater Copenhagen Fire Department – HBR (ambulance services) • Falck A/S (ambulance services) • Responce A/S (ambulance services) • Ambulance Southern Denmark (ambulance services) • EMS Copenhagen • EMS Region North Denmark • EMS Region Central Denmark • EMS Region Southern Denmark • EMS Region Sealand |
The PICO questions
| Clinical question | Population | Intervention | Comparator | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Should adult trauma patients where there is concern for the development of a secondary spinal cord injury undergo spinal stabilisation... | Adult trauma patients (> = 18 years), where there is concern for the development of a secondary spinal chord injury | |||
| 1.) ...with a rigid cervical collar? | ditto | Rigid cervical collar | No rigid cervical collar | Mortality Neurologic morbidity Ulcerations Pain / discomfort Respiratory deterioration Time to diagnose Intracranial pressure |
| 2.) …on a hard backboard? | ditto | Hard backboard | No hard backboard | Mortality Neurologic morbidity Pain/discomfort Ulcerations Time to diagnose |
| 3.) …in a vacuum mattress? | ditto | Vacuum mattress | No vacuum mattress | Mortality Neurologic morbidity Pain/discomfort Ulcerations Time to diagnose |
| 4.) Should adult trauma patients with isolated penetrating injuries undergo spinal stabilisation? | ditto | Spinal stabilisation | No spinal stabilisation | Mortality Neurologic morbidity |
| 5.) Should the decision, whether and how to stabilise the spine of a trauma patient be facilitated by a clinical decision tool? | ditto | Use of a clinical decision tool | No use of a clinical decision tool | Mortality Neurologic morbidity |
Fig. 1Prisma flow-chart depicting the literature search and selection of included and excluded studies
Summary of main recommendations, quality of evidence and strength of recommendation
| Recommendation | Quality of evidence | Strength of recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Adult trauma patients should not undergo spinal stabilisation with a rigid cervical collar | very low | weak |
| Adult trauma patients should not undergo spinal stabilisation on a hard backboard unless in case of time-critical ABCDE-unstable patients, where other spinal stabilisation measures would be more time consuming | very low | weak |
| Adult ABCDE-stable patients with neurologic deficit and / or osseous spinal pain on examination should undergo spinal stabilisation in a vacuum mattress | very low | weak |
| Adult trauma patients with isolated penetrating injury should not undergo spinal stabilisation | moderate | strong |
| Our triaging tool should be used in order to facilitate decision on spinal stabilisation | none | good clinical practice |
Fig. 2Algorithm for a clinical handling strategy with spinal trauma