P K Karthik Yelamarthy1, H S Chhabra2, Vedant Vaksha1, Yatish Agarwal3, Anita Agarwal1, Kalidutta Das1, Hans Joseph Erli4, Mihir Bapat5, Roop Singh6, Darshan Gautam7, Rushama Tandon8, G Balamurali9, Sriram Rajan10. 1. Indian Spinal Injuries Centre, Sector C, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi, India. 2. Indian Spinal Injuries Centre, Sector C, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi, India. drhschhabra@isiconline.org. 3. Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Imaging, Safdarjung Hospital and VM Medical College, New Delhi, India. 4. Centre for Musculoskeletal Surgery, Vivantes Humboldt Hospital, Berlin, Germany. 5. Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital and Medical Research Institute, Mumbai, India. 6. PGIMS, Rohtak, India. 7. Indian Spine and Bone Hospital, Kota, India. 8. Northern Railway Central Hospital, New Delhi, India. 9. Kauvery Spine Institute, Kauvery Hospital, Chennai, India. 10. Diwan Chand Satyapal Aggarwal Imaging Research Centre, New Delhi, India.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The Spinal Cord Society constituted a panel tasked with reviewing the literature on the radiological evaluation of spinal trauma with or without spinal cord injury and recommend a protocol. This position statement provides recommendations for the use of each modality, i.e., radiographs (X-rays), computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as vascular imaging, and makes suggestions on identifying or clearing spinal injury in trauma patients. METHODS: PubMed was searched for the corresponding keywords from January 1, 1980, to August 1, 2017. A MEDLINE search was subsequently undertaken after applying MeSH filters. Appropriate cross-references were retrieved. Out of the 545 articles retrieved, 105 relevant papers that address the present topic were studied and the extracted content was circulated for further discussions. A draft position statement was compiled and circulated among the panel members via e-mail. The draft was modified by incorporating relevant suggestions to reach a consensus. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: For imaging cervical and thoracolumbar spine trauma patients, CT without contrast is generally considered to be the initial line of imaging and radiographs are required if CT is unavailable or unaffordable. CT screening in polytrauma cases is best done with a multidetector CT by utilizing the reformatted images obtained when scanning the chest, abdomen, and pelvis (CT-CAP). MRI is indicated in cases with neurological involvement and advanced cervical degenerative changes and to determine the extent of soft tissue injury, i.e., disco-ligamentous injuries as well as epidural space compromise. MRI is also usually performed when X-rays and CT are unable to correlate with patient symptomatology. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PURPOSE: The Spinal Cord Society constituted a panel tasked with reviewing the literature on the radiological evaluation of spinal trauma with or without spinal cord injury and recommend a protocol. This position statement provides recommendations for the use of each modality, i.e., radiographs (X-rays), computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as vascular imaging, and makes suggestions on identifying or clearing spinal injury in traumapatients. METHODS: PubMed was searched for the corresponding keywords from January 1, 1980, to August 1, 2017. A MEDLINE search was subsequently undertaken after applying MeSH filters. Appropriate cross-references were retrieved. Out of the 545 articles retrieved, 105 relevant papers that address the present topic were studied and the extracted content was circulated for further discussions. A draft position statement was compiled and circulated among the panel members via e-mail. The draft was modified by incorporating relevant suggestions to reach a consensus. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: For imaging cervical and thoracolumbar spine traumapatients, CT without contrast is generally considered to be the initial line of imaging and radiographs are required if CT is unavailable or unaffordable. CT screening in polytrauma cases is best done with a multidetector CT by utilizing the reformatted images obtained when scanning the chest, abdomen, and pelvis (CT-CAP). MRI is indicated in cases with neurological involvement and advanced cervical degenerative changes and to determine the extent of soft tissue injury, i.e., disco-ligamentous injuries as well as epidural space compromise. MRI is also usually performed when X-rays and CT are unable to correlate with patient symptomatology. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
Entities:
Keywords:
Cervical spine trauma; Computed tomography; Magnetic resonance imaging; Position statement; Protocol; Spinal cord injury; Thoracolumbar spine trauma; X-rays
Authors: Insa Janssen; Nico Sollmann; Melanie Barz; Thomas Baum; Karl Schaller; Claus Zimmer; Yu-Mi Ryang; Jan S Kirschke; Bernhard Meyer Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) Date: 2021-03-05