| Literature DB >> 31431879 |
Julio C Furlan1,2, Sivakumar Gulasingam1,2, B Catharine Craven1,2.
Abstract
STUDYEntities:
Keywords: combatant; epidemiology; military; neurotrauma; spinal cord injury; war
Year: 2018 PMID: 31431879 PMCID: PMC6686388 DOI: 10.1177/2192568218776914
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Spine J ISSN: 2192-5682
Included References as Classified by Study Type, War Setting, and Quality of the Publications Based on the STROBE and LOE.
| Reference | Study Type | War Setting | STROBE | LOE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haynes[ | Case series | World War II | 7 | IV |
| Schneider et al[ | Case series | World War II | 8 | IV |
| Klemperer et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | World War II | 6 | III |
| McNamara et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Vietnam War (admissions at the 24th Evacuation Hospital in Vietnam from September 1968 to November 1969) | 8 | III |
| Jankovic et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Clinical Hospital Split, Croatia (admissions from August 1991 to December 1995—Croatia War) | 9 | III |
| Jacobson et al[ | Case series | Long Beach Veterans Administration Hospital (admission from December 1965 to April 1969—Vietnam war) | 8 | IV |
| Alaca et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Gulhane Military Medical Academy, Turkey (admissions during a “2-year period”) | 9 | III |
| Kahraman et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Gulhane Military Medical Academy, Turkey (admissions from 1994 to 2000) | 10 | III |
| Bhatoe et al[ | Case series | Three service hospitals in India (admissions from 1995 to 2001) | 6 | IV |
| Radonic et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Clinical Hospital Split, Croatia (admissions from June 1990 to December 1995—Wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina) | 8 | III |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | American service members serving in the US Armed Forces from January 1, 2000, to December 31, 2009, including Iraq and Afghanistan wars | 16 | III |
| Blair et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Joint Theater Trauma Registry—Global War on Terrorism (Iraq and Afghanistan wars from October 2001 to December 2009) | 15 | III |
| Lehman et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | All patients with a burst fracture from T12 to L5 who were treated at Walter Reed Army Medical Center from September 2001 to May 2008 (Iraq and Afghanistan wars) | 16 | III |
| Blair et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Global War on Terrorism (Iraq and Afghanistan Wars from October 2001 to December 2009) | 16 | III |
| Breeze et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Joint Theatre Trauma Registry—Iraq and Afghanistan Wars (August 1, 2004, to January 1, 2008) | 12 | III |
| Possley et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | American service members serving in the US Armed Forces from March 2003 to December 2009 including Iraq and Afghanistan wars | 15 | III |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | American service members serving in the US Armed Forces from 2000 to 2009 including Iraq and Afghanistan wars | 18 | III |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | All service members within the US Armed Forces from January 1, 2001, to December 31, 2010, including Iraq and Afghanistan wars | 15 | III |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Individuals with the combat-specific designation of cavalry scout who sustained injuries in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars (2003-2011) | 19 | III |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | American service members with SCI who were killed in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars (2003-2011) | 19 | III |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Casualties in the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars—data from the Department of Defense Trauma Registry (2005-2009) | 21 | III |
| Javadi et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Iranian SCI veterans of the Iraq-Iran War (1980-1988) | 11 | III |
| Galvin et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | NATO personnel of the Afghanistan war (26 injured during combat operations) | 18 | III |
| Rivera et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom (October 2001 to January 2005) | 15 | III |
| Guzelkucuk et al[ | Retrospective cohort study | Turkish Armed Forces Rehabilitation Center | 14 | III |
Abbreviations: STROBE, Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology; SCI, spinal cord injury; NATO, North Atlantic Treaty Organization; LOE, level of evidence.
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram describing the steps of the literature search and the selection of the articles included in this systematic review.
Demographics and Injury Characteristics of War-Related Spinal Cord Injury According to This Systematic Review.
| Reference | Group | Number of Cases | Age (Years) | Sex | Level of SCI | Severity of SCI | Mechanism of SCI | Associated Bodily Injuries |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haynes[ | War wounds of the spine | 184 | NA | NA | C: 19% (35) T: 44% (81) L: 35.9% (66) S: 1.1% (2) | Complete: 31% (17) Incomplete: 9.2% (57) Unknown: 59.8% (110) | NA | NA |
| Schneider et al[ | Penetrating wounds of the spine | 94 | NA | NA | C: 12.8% (12) T: 48.9% (46) L: 34.0% (32) S: 4.3% (4) | NA | NA | Chest: 31.9% (30) Retroperitoneum: 8.5% (8) Abdomen: 10.6% (10) |
| Klemperer et al[ | SCI | 201 | NA | NA | C: 23.4% (47) T: 46.8% (94) L: 27.4% (55) S: 2.5% (5) | Complete: 55.7% (112) Incomplete: 44.3% (89) | NA | NA |
| Jankovic et al[ | Spine injuries and SCI | Soldiers: 86 Civilians: 10 | Mean age at injury Soldiers: 28.3 Civilians: 38.8 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Jacobson et al[ | SCI in Vietnamese combat | 114 | 30 years of age or younger: 103 (90.4%) Older than 30 years: 11 (9.6%) | NA | C: 13.2% (15) T: 54.3% (62) LS: 32.5% (37) | Complete: 69.3% (79) Incomplete: 30.7% (35) | Bullet: 50% (57) Shell fragment: 28.9% (33) Blast: 11.4% (13) MVA: 6.1% (7) Other: 3.5% (4) | Head and neck: 7.0% (8) Chest: 37.7% (43) Abdomen: 24.6% (28) Limb/pelvis: 13.2% (15) |
| Alaca et al[ | Gunshot wound-induced SCI | 105 | Mean age at SCI: 25 | Male: 100% | C: 1.9% (2) T: 64.8% (68) L: 28.6% (30) S: 4.8% (5) | A: 83.8% (88) B: 4.8% (5) C: 1.0% (1) D: 10.5% (11) | Bullet: 93.3% (98) Shrapnel/mine: 6.7% (7) | Chest: 34.3% (36) Solid organ: 34.3% (36) Peripheral nerve: 1.0% (1) |
| Kahraman et al[ | Spinal military gunshot injuries | 106 | Mean age at SCI: 21.2 | Male: 100% | C: 33.0% (35) T: 23.6% (25) LS: 43.4% (46) | Complete: 21.7% (23) Incomplete: 78.3% (83) | Penetrating: 61.3% (65) Perforating: 25.5% (27) Unknown: 13.2% (14) | Overall: 46.2% (49) Chest: 17.0% (18) Abdomen: 20.8% (22) Neck: 8.5% (9) |
| Bhatoe et al[ | Low-velocity missile injuries to the spine | 22 | Mean age at SCI: 30.7 | Male: 100% | C: 31.8% (7) T: 54.5% (12) L: 13.6% (3) | Complete: 68.2% (15) Incomplete: 18.2% (4) Cauda equina injury: 13.6% (3) | Splinter-related injury: 81.8% (18) Bullet-related injury: 18.2% (4) | Head and neck: 22.7% (5) Chest: 18.2% (4) Abdomen: 13.6% (3) |
| Blair et al[ | War-related injuries to the back, spinal column, and/or spinal cord | 598 soldiers sustained 2101 injuries to the spinal column/cord | Mean age at SCI: 26.5 | Male: 97.7% (584) Female: 2.3% (14) | C: 15.2% (319) T: 28.1% (591) L: 40.8% (857) S: 10.9% (230) SCI: 5% (104) (out of 2101 spine traumas) | Complete: 45.2% (47) Incomplete: 48.1% (50) Unknown: 6.7% (7) (out of 104 SCIs) | Explosion: 56.2% (336) MVA: 29.3% (175) Gunshot: 14.9% (89) Fall: 7.4% (44) Unknown: 4.8% (29) (Multiple mechanisms apparently occurred) | Overall: 78.1% (467) Multiple: 44.5% (266) Chest: 26.6% (159) Abdomen: 24.9% (149) Head: 22.7% (136) Face: 21.2% (127) |
| Breeze et al[ | All United Kingdom service personnel sustaining wounds to the neck | Neck wounds: 75 Spine injuries or SCI: 32 | NA | NA | NA | NA | Gunshot: 25% (8) Explosion: 71.9% (23) Unknown: 3.1% (1) | NA |
| Blair et al[ | War-related injuries to the back, spinal column, and/or spinal cord | 502 soldiers (battle-related injuries) | Mean age at SCI: 26.3 | Male: 98.8% (496) Female: 1.2% (6) | C: 14.3% (262) T: 27.9% (511) L: 41.3% (758) S: 11.5% (210) SCI: 5% (91) (out of 1834 spine traumas) | Complete SCI: 45.1% (41) (out of 91 SCIs) | Explosion: 66.7% (335)a MVA: 24.5% (123) Gunshot: 16.7% (84) Fall: 3.0% (15) (Multiple mechanisms apparently occurred) | NA |
| 96 soldiers (non–battle-related injuries) | Mean age at SCI: 27.3 | Male: 91.7% (88) Female: 8.3% (8) | C: 21.3% (57) T: 30% (80) L: 37.1% (99) S: 7.5% (20) SCI: 5% (13) (out of 267 spine traumas) | Complete SCI: 46.2% (6) (out of 13 SCIs) | Explosion: 1.0% (1) MVA: 54.2% (52) Gunshot: 5.2% (5) Fall: 30.2% (29) (Multiple mechanisms apparently occurred) | NA | ||
| Lehman et al[ | Combat-related injuries and thoracolumbar fractures | 32 | Mean age at SCI: 26 | Male: 93.8% (30) Female: 6.2% (2) | Improvised explosive device (IED): 25% (8) IED/MVA: 34.4% (11) Helicopter: 21.9% (7) Gunshot: 9.4% (3) Fall: 6.3% (2) Unknown: 3.1% (1) | Limb fractures: 40.6% (13) Abdomen: 25% (8) Chest: 12.5% (4) | ||
| Schoenfeld et al[ | SCI identified in autopsies | 872 | Mean age at death: 26.6 years | Male: 99.0% (863) F: 1.0% (9) | C: 26.5% (231) T: 34.4% (300) L: 59.9% (522) S: 25.1% (219) | NA | Explosion: 74.5% (650) Gunshot: 14.8% (129) MVA: 7.8% (68) Other: 2.9% (25) | Head and neck: 73.1% (637) Abdomen: 47.0% (410) Chest: 56.0% (488) Limbs: 74.0% (645) |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | SCI identified in autopsies | 2089 service members with SCI | Mean age at death: 26.6 | Male: 97.8% (2044) Female: 2.2% (45) | C: 52.4% (1095) T: 44.2% (924) L: 30.5% (638) S: 19.4% (405) | NA | Gunshot: 14.9% (312) Explosion: 67.2% (1403) Aviation: 11.2% (234) Other: 6.7% (140) | Head and neck: 70.2% (1466) Abdomen: 65.3% (1365) Brain: 48.0% (1002) Chest: 44.2% (924) Pelvis: 47.2% (985) GU: 37.9% (792) |
| Javadi et al[ | NA | 1984 | Mean age at the date of study: 46 ± 6.7 | Male: 98.3% (1950) Female: 1.7% (174) | C: 11.0% (219) T: 63.3% (1256) L: 23.8% (472) S: 1.9% (37) | AIS A: 91.2% (1810) AIS B/C/D: 8.8% (174) | NA | NA |
| Galvin et al[ | NA | 30 | Mean age at date of SCI: 27.6 ± 6.5 | Male: 100% | L2 or above: 65% (19) L3 or below: 37% (11) | AIS A/B/C: 43.3% (13) AIS D/E: 56.7% (17) | Blast: 70% (21) Gunshot: 10% (3) Fall: 7% (2) MVA: 7% (12) Other: 7% (2) | Mean ISS: 26.1 ± 8.7 Brain: 6 (20%) |
| Guzelkucuk et al[ | Military gunshot SCI | 45 | Mean age at date of SCI: 23.1 ± 4.0 | Male: 100% | C: 17.8% (8) T: 51.1% (23) L: 31.1% (14) | AIS A: 64.5% (29) AIS B: 17.8% (8) AIS C: 4.4% (2) AIS D: 13.3% (6) | NA | Overall: 68.9% (31) Abdomen: 40% (18) Chest: 28.9% (13) Limb: 11.1% (5) Other: 4.4% (2) |
| Civilian gunshot SCI | 57 | Mean age at date of SCI: 29.9 ± 10.8 | Male: 82.5% (46) Female: 17.5% (10) | C: 24.6% (14) T: 64.9% (37) L: 10.5% (6) | AIS A: 57.9% (33) AIS B: 15.8% (9) AIS C: 8.8% (5) AIS D: 17.5% (10) | NA | Overall: 43.9% (25) Abdomen: 25.5% (12) Chest: 27.7% (13) Limb: 19.1% (9) Other: 0% |
Abbreviations: C, cervical; T, thoracic; L, lumbar; S, sacral; LS, lumbosacral: ISS, injury severity score; MVA, motor vehicle accident; AIS, ASIA [American Spinal Injury Association] Impairment Scale; NA, not available; GU, genitourinary system.
aSignificant differences were reported.
Incidence of War-Related Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) According to This Systematic Review.
| Reference | War Setting | Case Identification | Numbers | Overall Incidence | Subgroup Incidence Rates | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schoenfeld et al[ | American service members serving in the US Armed Forces from January 1, 2000, to December 31, 2009, including Iraq and Afghanistan Wars | Defense Medical Epidemiology Database | 13 813 333 military service members; 5928 service members with SCI | NA | ||
| Schoenfeld et al[ | American service members serving in the US Armed Forces from 2000 to 2009 including Iraq and Afghanistan Wars | Defense Medical Epidemiology Database | 13 813 333 military service members; cervical fracture without SCI occurred in 3106 individuals; 942 individuals sustained SCI | |||
| Possley et al[ | American service members serving in the US Armed Forces from March 2003 to December 2009 including Iraq and Afghanistan Wars | Joint Theater Trauma Registry | Service members with spinal injuries: 598 Total of spinal injuries: 1819 Total of 1 074 975 service members-year | 5.6 cases of spinal injury per 10 000 service members-year 16.9 spinal injuries per 10 000 service members-year | ||
| Schoenfeld et al[ | American casualties in the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars—data from the Department of Defense Trauma Registry (2005-2009) | SCI identified in autopsies | 1 992 236 person-years of exposure to the combat zones; 7877 combat casualties; 872 combatants had spinal trauma | |||
| Schoenfeld et al[ | All service members within the US Armed Forces from January 1, 2001, to December 31, 2010, including Iraq and Afghanistan Wars | Defense Medical Epidemiology Database | Population at risk: 13 871 384 person-years 5277 service members with lumbar spine fractures 518 service members with SCI |
a Significant differences that were reported.
Frequency of Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Among Other War-Related Injuries According to This Systematic Review.
| Reference | Number of Cases | Control Group | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| McNamara et al[ | 547 individuals with intrathoracic injuries: 400 American service men 147 individuals from free world military force or civilians | NA | SCI: 13.7% (75) |
| Radonic et al[ | Antipersonnel mine injuries in soldiers: 329 | Antipersonnel mine injuries in civilians: 93 | Spine trauma: 1.7% (7) SCI: 1.2% (5) |
| Blair et al[ | Total service members evacuated as combat casualties: 10 979 | NA | Spinal column injuries or SCI: 5.4% of all casualties |
| Breeze et al[ | Total of individuals with neck wounds: 75 | NA | Spine injuries or SCI: 42.7% of the individuals who sustained wounds in the neck |
| Schoenfeld et al[ | Total of cavalry scouts: 701 | NA | SCI: 8% Spine trauma: 31.4% All casualties: 12% All musculoskeletal wounds: 4% |
| Rivera et al[ | Total of wounded soldiers: 450 | NA | SCI: 4% At least one spine-related “unfitting condition” (ie, impairment that prevents a soldier to remain on active duty): 14.7% |