Literature DB >> 33940772

Obstetric Outcomes of Women Who Sustained Traumatic Spinal Injury during Pregnancy: A Systematic Review.

Aatik Arsh1, Haider Darain1.   

Abstract

Literature regarding pregnant women who sustained traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy is limited. Existing papers are mainly case reports, and this indicates a need for more high-quality research evidence in this area. Therefore, this study was designed to systematically review available literature that reported demographic information, clinical characteristics, and obstetric outcomes of women who sustained spinal injury during pregnancy. Studies published from the earliest record to January 2019, which reported traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy, were included. Studies that have reported pregnancy in patients with pre-existing spinal injury, review articles, commentaries, letter to editors, conference papers, and studies published in languages other than English were excluded. Sixteen studies reporting on 26 women were included. Their mean age was 26.7±5.5 years. Motor vehicle accidents were the main cause of spinal injury (n=15, 58%). Of the cases, four women sustained spinal injury during the 1st trimester of pregnancy, of which one had a spontaneous abortion, one delivered a baby with arthrogryposis multiplex congenital disorder, and the third one delivered a premature baby who died shortly after the delivery. Fifteen women sustained injury during their 2nd trimester, of which 14 delivered normal babies, while six sustained spinal injury during the 3rd trimester. Of these women, five delivered normal babies at term. Outcomes of pregnancy appear significantly affected if a spinal injury occurs during the 1st trimester of pregnancy; however, injuries sustained during the 2nd and 3rd trimesters can have good obstetric outcomes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Obstetric outcomes; Pregnancy; Spine; Trauma

Year:  2021        PMID: 33940772      PMCID: PMC9066247          DOI: 10.31616/asj.2020.0192

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Asian Spine J        ISSN: 1976-1902


Introduction

Traumatic spinal injuries during pregnancy are less frequent; however, these injuries are associated with inconceivable suffering and financial costs [1,2]. Trauma during pregnancy is one of the leading non-obstetric causes of fetal deaths [3]. In cases where the fetus survives, complications such as low birth weight and prematurity have been reported in the literature [4,5]. Besides fetal complications, acute spinal injury in pregnant women brings a high risk of maternal morbidity and mortality [5-7]. Severe spinal injury can lead to spinal cord injury (SCI). In these patients, spinal injury and SCI-specific complications such as paralysis, bowel and bladder incontinence, deep venous thrombosis, hypotension, autonomic dysreflexia (AD), and vertebral instability present complex challenges to obstetricians, surgeons, and rehabilitation specialists [6-10]. Thus, an interdisciplinary team approach is necessary to manage this unique patient population. However, financial constraints are present in developing countries, and relevant facilities are not always available for this uncommon condition [7]. Spinal injury and SCI commonly occur in young individuals, and the majority of women who sustain these injuries are of childbearing age [7,9,10]. Some studies have investigated the outcomes of pregnancy and rehabilitation in women with pre-existing SCI; however, the literature regarding pregnant women who sustained spinal injury during pregnancy is limited [8]. Existing literature mainly consists of case reports, which indicates a need for more high-quality research evidence in this area. Therefore, this study was designed to systematically review available literature that reported demographic information, clinical characteristics, and obstetric outcomes of women who sustained spinal injury during pregnancy. The research question was “What are the clinical features and obstetric outcomes of women who sustained traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy?”

Methods

A systematic review was conducted according to PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines from February to July 2019. The study was registered with PROSPERO (www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO) under the registration number CRD42018115815. A literature search was performed in March 2019 using databases of PubMed/MEDLINE, AMED, EMBASE, HMIC, BNI, PsycINFO, CINAHL (EBSCO), and Health Business Elite. The literature search was performed using the following terms: spinal cord (injury, damage, compression, ischemia, trauma, contusion, laceration, transection, syndrome), OR spinal (fracture, sublaxation, dislocation, injury, trauma), OR cervical vertebrae injuries, OR lumbar vertebrae injuries, OR thoracic vertebrae injuries, OR SCI, OR paraplegia, OR quadriplegia, OR tetraplegia, AND pregnancy, OR pregnant women, OR antenatal, OR prenatal, OR perinatal, OR gravid, OR gestation. Truncations were used when appropriate. Following search limits were applied in PubMed database: species (humans) and sex (female). Search results were imported into the reference manager Endnote X7 (Clarivate, Philadelphia, PA, USA) to remove duplicates. After duplicate removal, two authors (A.A. and H.D.) independently screened the titles and abstracts of the studies and divided the articles into “relevant” and “irrelevant” categories according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. All discrepancies were resolved by consensus meeting/discussion, and the principal author (A.A.) made the final decision. Research articles published from the earliest record to January 2019 that reported traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy were included. Studies on non-traumatic spinal injury, such as due to osteoporosis or neoplastic causes, were excluded. Only peer-reviewed articles in English language were included. Reference list of articles were systematically scanned to find additional related studies. Reviews, commentaries, letter to editors, and conference papers were excluded. The principal author (A.A.) studied the full texts of the articles selected, and the following data were extracted from each included study: principal author, year of publication, country, patient age, cause of injury, gestational age at the time of injury, radiological findings, neurological deficits, spine management (surgical/conservative), obstetric outcomes, complications, and follow-up status. Extracted data were checked by the second author (H.D.), and discrepancies were resolved by consensus. The methodological quality of the included studies was evaluated by adapting the methods of Bazerbachi et al. [11]. Given that there were no available validated tools to assess the methodological quality of case reports and case series, Bazerbachi et al. [11] derived items from the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale that were appropriate for non-comparative case reports and case series studies. They removed two items (comparability and adjustment) from the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale for their systematic review of non-comparative case reports and case series. According to Bazerbachi et al. [11], the quality of the report is good when all five criteria were fulfilled, moderate when four were fulfilled, and low when ≤3 were fulfilled. The same scoring method was used in the present systematic review. IBM SPSS ver. 23.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA) was used to calculate the mean, simple frequency, percentages, and proportion from the total case reports.

Results

The initial search identified 461 research articles. One study was identified through additional sources [12]. Following removal of duplicates, 399 studies were left, of which 19 were excluded because they were published in languages other than English. Titles and abstracts of the remaining 380 articles were screened, and 361 excluded because either they reported spinal injury due to non-traumatic causes or pregnancy in women with pre-existing SCI or they reported minor spinal injuries without associated vertebral fracture or SCI. Of the remaining 19 studies, three studies [13-15], which were narrative reviews or expert opinions, were excluded (Fig. 1). Another study reported two cases, of which one was of non-traumatic origin [9]. The non-traumatic case was removed, leaving the study solely with the traumatic case. Finally, 16 publications reporting on 26 cases were included in the systematic review. Eleven (68.8%) of the included studies had poor methodological quality, while the remaining 5 (31.2%) had moderate methodological quality [2,6,7,9,10,12,16-25] (Table 1).
Fig. 1

Study selection flowchart. SCI, spinal cord injury.

Table 1

Summary of the included studies

StudyMethodological qualityCountryAge (yr) / G & PCause of injuryGA (at the time of injury)Skeletal injuryNeurological deficit / AIS gradeSpine managementObstetric outcomeSCI-specific complicationsFU
Tanchev et al. [17] (2000)LowBulgariaCase 1: 20 / NRMVA7th lunar monthT12–L1 spinal fracturesNo neurological deficitOpen reduction and posterior compression instrumentation along with posterior fusion with autografts from the iliac crestA normal healthy baby was delivered through cesarean section.NRAt an 18-month FU after the surgery no signs of neurologic compromise
BulgariaCase 2: 19 / NRMVA6th lunar monthT12–L1 spinal fracturesNeurologic signs in the form of paresthesias and numbness in the lower extremitiesOpen reduction and posterior stabilization along with posterior fusion with autografts from the iliac crestSpontaneous abortionNRAt a 12-month FU after the surgery no signs of neurologic compromise
Gençosmanoğlu et al. [24] (2001)LowTurkey21 / G2P1GSW16th weekFracture of the C4 and C5 vertebraeC5 ASIA BSpinal injury managed conservatively with Philadelphia collarA normal healthy female baby was delivered through NVD.Neuropathic bladder, constipation, anemia; severe lower limb spasticity at FUAt 13 months post-injury, the patient improved to ASIA D and she walked with crutches.
Popov et al. [10] (2003)LowSouth Africa21 / primigravidaGSW36th weekC6–C7 vertebral bodies fractureA left hemiplegia with decreased sensory perception on the right due to compression of the spinal cord by the oedemaSpinal injury managed conservatively with soft cervical collarA normal healthy baby was delivered through cesarean section.NRPatient neurological status at FU is not reported. However, it was reported that the patient makes satisfactory progress to recovery during hospitalization.
Malomo et al. [22] (2005)LowNigeria25 / primigravidaMVA29th weekC4–C5 anterior subluxation and fracture of C4 spinous processIncomplete C4 spinal cord injury; Frankel grade CSpinal injury managed conservatively with Gardner Wells’ tongs traction2.3 kg female baby was delivered through vaginal delivery with the aid of episiotomy.UTI, anemiaAt 14 months post-injury, the patient was fully ambulant without any support.
Nnamdi et al. [23] (2007)LowNigeriaCase 1: 27 / G4P3Fall26th weekAnterior wedge compression fracture of C6, C7–T1 subluxationIt was reported that patient had sensation up to T4 level and had normal upper limb power & no lower limbs power but exact information related to neurological level was not reported.Spinal injury managed conservatively with skull tractionA normal healthy female baby was delivered through NVD.UTI, PU, pneumonia, anemiaAt a 3-month FU after delivery, the baby was normal while the mother remained a paraplegic rehabilitated on a wheelchair.
NigeriaCase 2: 35 / G5P4MVA28th weekC5–C6 unstable fractureFrankel scale ASpinal injury managed conservatively with cervical collarA premature baby of 1.2 kg was delivered 3 days after the injury but the mother herself died shortly after the delivery.Headache, blurring of vision, blood pressure 160 / 100 mm Hg (AD), death of the patientAt a 3-week FU, the baby weighed 1.65 kg and at a 3-month FU, the baby weighed 5 kg and was doing well.
Lenarz et al. [6] (2009)ModerateUSA39 / G2P1Fall17th weekBurst fracture of 12th thoracic vertebral bodyIt was reported that patient experienced lower extremity weakness and bowel & bladder incontinence but exact information related to neurological level was not reported.Vertebral body corpectomy and spinal canal decompressionA normal healthy baby was delivered through cesarean section.NRAt a 5-month FU after delivery, the patient was able to walk without assistive devices. Her bowel and bladder were continent.
Schnake et al. [21] (2011)ModerateGermany24 / NRMVA19th weekWedged compression fracture of T5 and complete burst fracture of T8No neurological deficitAnterior, thoracoscopic-assisted reduction, and stabilizationA normal healthy baby was delivered. (Mode of delivery not reported.)NRAt a 12-month FU, no complication was present.
Gotfryd et al. [20] (2015)ModerateBrazil20 / NRMVA20th weekFracture and dislocation of T4–T5 vertebraeT6 Frankel scale ADecompression, reduction, and fixation with pedicle screwsA normal healthy female baby was delivered through NVD.NRPatient neurological status at FU is not reported while at 2-year FU, her baby was normal.
Engel et al. [9] (2013)ModerateAustralia28 / primigravidaMVA12th weekFracture dislocation of T6 vertebraeT6 ASIA APosterior pedicle screw fixation (T4–T7), T5 / T6 vertebrectomy with iliac crest graft2.65-kg boy baby with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita was delivered by caesarean section.UTI, anemiaAt a 6-year FU, the patient remained T6 ASIA A paraplegic while her child had cerebral palsy.
Baranović et al. [16] (2014)LowCroatiaAge / NRMVA17th weekLuxation fracture of the C5 and C6 vertebraeASIA BDisk extirpation and anterior spondylodesisA normal healthy baby was delivered. (Mode of delivery not reported.)NRThe patient achieved complete recovery of the neurological deficit within few days of the surgery.
Sonawane et al. [2] (2018)LowIndia28 / G3P2Fall26th weekBurst fracture of T12 vertebraL1 ASIA ALaminectomy with posterior decompression and short-segment pedicular screw fixationA normal healthy baby was delivered through cesarean section.NRAt a 2-year FU, the patient was paraplegic with partial recovery of bowel and bladder function.
Arsh et al. [7] (2017)LowPakistanCase 1: 30 / G6P5Fall24th weekNRT12 ASIA BSpinal injury managed conservativelyA normal healthy female baby was delivered through cesarean section.Sacral PU & colostomy at FUAt a 3-year FU, the patient improved to ASIA C and she walked with AFO in the walking frame.
PakistanCase 2: 25 / G3P2Fall30th weekNRC5 ASIA AACDFA normal healthy boy baby was delivered through assisted breech vaginal delivery.UTI & bowel abnormalities at FUAt a 2-year FU, the patient remained C5 ASIA A tetraplegic.
PakistanCase 3: 24 / G4P3MVA27th weekNRC7 ASIA BACDFA normal healthy female baby was delivered through assisted vaginal delivery.UTI, hydronephrosisAt a 2-year FU, the patient improved to ASIA D and she walks with crutches.
PakistanCase 4: 29 / G3P2MVA11th weekNRL1 ASIA ASpine fixationA premature baby was delivered through NVD but died after 1 hour of delivery.Multiple PU, anemia, depressionAt a 1-year FU, the patient remained L1 ASIA A Paraplegic.
PakistanCase 5: 38 / G4P3GSW21st weekNRL1 ASIA CSpinal injury managed conservativelyA normal healthy female baby was delivered through NVD.Coccygeal PU; bowel and bladder disturbances at FUAt a 1-year FU, the patient improved to ASIA D and she walks without any support.
Qureshi et al. [25] (2017)LowSaudi Arabia32 / primigravidaMVA2nd trimester (at the time of injury) 27th week (2 months post injury)C6–C7 fracture dislocationC6 ASIA BCervical spine decompression, C7 corpectomy and C6–T1 internal fixation1.7-kg premature baby boy was delivered through cesarean section.AD, UTI, depression, PU, spasticity, urethral injury secondary to catheter pull, chest infectionAt the time of discharge from rehabilitation, the patient was partially independent in ADLs. Patient neurological status at FU is not reported.
Agrawal [18] (2018)LowIndia20 / G2P1MVA12th weekAnterior wedging of T11 and T12 vertebraeNo neurological deficitT11–L1 pedicle screws and rod fixationFU ultrasound of the fetus was normal as per the age of the fetus.NRNR
Zemmar et al. [19] (2018)LowYemenCase 1: 30 / G5P3Fall23rd weekC5 / 6 fracture dislocationC4 ASIA AAnterior C5 corpectomy and C4–6 fixationA normal healthy baby was delivered through NVD.UTI, PU, hypotension, anemiaNR
YemenCase 2: 26 / G5P4MVA18th weekC6 / 7 fracture dislocationC5 ASIA BAnterior C7 corpectomy and C6–T1 fixationA normal healthy baby was delivered through NVD.UTI, PU, DVT, anemia, hypotensionNR
YemenCase 3: 30 / G3P2Fall17th weekT12 / L1 fracture dislocationT11 ASIA AT12 laminectomy and T11–L1 posterior instrumentation and fusionA normal healthy baby was delivered. (In-text it was mentioned but in tabulated form, this case was left blank.)UTINR
YemenCase 4: 25 / G3P2Fall20th weekL1 wedge fractureNo neurological deficitSpinal injury managed conservativelyA normal healthy baby was delivered through cesarean section.UTINR
YemenCase 5: 22 / G2P1MVA12th weekT7 wedge fractureNo neurological deficitSpinal injury managed conservativelyAbortionUTI, anemia, multiple traumaNR
Pedaballe et al. [12] (2018)ModerateIndia30 / G2P1MVA31st weekC4–C5 extension compression SCIC4–C5 ASIA BACDFA normal healthy baby was delivered through cesarean section.NRAt a 1-year FU, the patient improved to ASIA D and she was ambulatory without any support.

G, gravida; P, para; GA, gestational age; AIS, ASIA Impairment Scale; SCI, spinal cord injury; FU, follow-up; NR, not reported; MVA, motor vehicle accident; GSW, gunshot wound; ASIA, American Spinal Injury Association; NVD, normal vaginal delivery; UTI, urinary tract infection; PU, pressure ulcer; AD, autonomic dysreflexia; AFO, ankle foot orthosis; ACDF, anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; ADLs, activities of daily living; DVT, deep venous thrombosis.

The studies included were published from 2000 to 2018. Geographical distribution of these studies is as follows: Bulgaria (n=2), Turkey (n=1), South Africa (n=1), Nigeria (n=3), United States (n=1), Germany (n=1), Brazil (n=1), Australia (n=1), Croatia (n=1), India (n=3), Pakistan (n=5), Saudi Arabia (n=1), and Yemen (n=5). The subjects’ age ranged from 19 to 39 years, with a mean age of 26.7±5.5 years. Motor vehicle accident (MVA) was the cause of injury (n=15, 58%), followed by falls (n=8, 31%) and gunshot wound (GSW) (n=3, 11%). Less than half (n=12, 46%) of the cases had cervical injuries, while the remaining 14 (54%) had thoracic or lumbar injuries. A large proportion (n=17, 65%) of patients were managed surgically, while the remaining patients (n=9, 35%) were treated conservatively. There were 4 (15%), 15 (58%), and 6 (23%) women who sustained injuries during the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimesters, respectively. In one case (4%), the patient sustained injury in the 6th lunar month of her pregnancy. Moreover, 20 women (77%), of which 10 had cervical injuries and 10 had thoracic/lumbar injuries, delivered normal healthy babies. Of these women, 13 underwent spinal surgery and seven were managed conservatively. Obstetric outcomes were not satisfactory in four women who sustained injury during the 1st trimester; one had a spontaneous abortion, another delivered a baby with arthrogryposis multiplex congenital disorder, and the third one delivered a premature baby who died an hour after delivery. The outcome of the fourth women cannot be reported, as no information was provided on follow-up or delivery. Outcomes of women who sustained spinal injury during the 2nd trimester were satisfactory, and of the 15 women, 14 delivered healthy babies, while one delivered a premature baby. Similar satisfactory outcomes were reported for women who sustained spinal injury in the 3rd trimester of pregnancy; of the six women, five delivered normal babies, while one delivered at preterm. The latter woman developed AD during labor and died shortly after the delivery; however, her baby survived. The woman who sustained injury during the 6th lunar month of her pregnancy had a spontaneous abortion.

Discussion

Spinal injuries lead to an array of physical suffering [16-18]. Moreover, these injuries have profound social, financial, and psychological implications [18,26]. Consequences of spinal injuries are significantly exacerbated in women who sustained spinal injuries during pregnancy, and these effects can be worsened further when clinicians are uncertain on the best procedures to save or treat the patient and her baby. Frequent and effective communication among health care professionals, including obstetricians, surgeons, and rehabilitation specialists who form a part of an interdisciplinary team, is necessary for the best management of these patients [7,9,12]. Traumatic spinal injuries during pregnancy are not very common; therefore, limited information exists about the clinical characteristics and obstetric outcomes in this population [19,20]. This systematic review aimed to assimilate data from all quality, peer-reviewed research to document the current knowledge base pertaining to demographics, clinical characteristics, and obstetric outcomes of women who sustained spinal injury during their pregnancies. Fall from height, MVA, and GSW are the leading causes of traumatic spinal injuries in both developed and developing countries [27,28]. Our findings indicate that MVA was the most common cause of spinal injury in pregnant women. This aligns with a previous study reporting that MVA is the leading cause of trauma during pregnancy and accounts for approximately 82% of fetal deaths during trauma [29]. Most of the patients in this review sustained thoracic or lumbar injuries, which are commonly injured areas of the spine during trauma [30,31]. A small proportion of the included cases had injury during the 1st trimester, while the majority had spinal injury during the 2nd and 3rd trimesters. This finding agrees with the results of previous studies that maternal injuries during the 1st trimester of pregnancy are uncommon [32,33]. About two-thirds (n=17, 65%) of patients in this review received surgical treatment. While surgical management of spinal fracture in pregnancy carries a risk to both the mother and fetus due to positioning, blood loss, and inherent risk of anesthesia, pregnancy is not a contraindication for surgical management of the spine [2,17,21]. Numerous studies have suggested that conservative or surgical management of the spine does not affect pregnancy outcomes in women who sustained spinal injury during pregnancy [2,7,19,22-24]. Some studies have reported that maternal surgery during pregnancy does not increase the risk of fetal congenital anomalies, though evidence suggests that surgery during pregnancy increases the risk of preterm delivery. Patients with unstable spine require surgical treatment, with the objective of achieving mechanical stabilization of the spine [7,20,25,34]. Utilizing the prone position for spinal surgery is feasible during the early stages of pregnancy but is contraindicated after 12 weeks of gestation [19,34]. The lateral decubitus position is recommended in the later stages of pregnancy because the risk of aortocaval compression is higher in the supine position [25,26,34]. In this systematic review, drawing conclusion about positioning for surgery during pregnancy from the studies included was not possible because of the high heterogeneity in the surgical procedures and majority of the studies did not report positioning of patients during surgery. According to Sonawane et al. [2], it is prudent to postpone the surgery until after delivery if the patient is near term; however, earlier weeks of pregnancy, unstable spine, and incomplete neurological deficit are clear-cut indications for surgery. Of the cases included in this review, nine were managed conservatively. Conservative management mainly reduces the risk of premature birth and prevents the fetus from being exposed to radiations [12]. However, conservative management increases the risk of developing SCI-specific secondary complications such as pressure ulcers and deep venous thrombosis. Moreover, delay in starting aggressive rehabilitation can lead to psychological issues [7,12,22]. In this review, the three women who sustained spinal injury due to GSW were managed conservatively; because spinal instability due to GSW rarely occurs, most GSW cases are managed conservatively [24]. In clinical practice, patients with spinal injury whose spine is either stable or closed reduction is possible are managed conservatively [7,22,23]. However, presenting recommendations regarding conservative or surgical management during pregnancy may be beyond the scope of this review. To simplify, the nature of the spinal injury, stage of pregnancy, neurological status, and preferences of the patients are certain factors that should be considered before treatment decision [12,22,35]. Anesthesia for the management of spinal injury during pregnancy is rarely described in literature. Physiological changes that accompany pregnancy can affect maternal and fetal safety during anesthesia [16,36]. Changes in the cardiorespiratory system during pregnancy should be considered when conducting anesthesia for pregnant women with spinal injury. Because oxygen reserve is generally reduced in pregnant women and anesthesia further decreases functional residual capacity, even short periods of apnea can have devastating results. Therefore, close monitoring of maternal oxygenation throughout the procedure is recommended [37,38]. Another major problem is that pregnant women are at risk of anesthetic overdose. Generally, all anesthetic agents have the potential to cross the placenta; nevertheless, none of the commonly used anesthetic agents have teratogenic effects. Despite this, fetal hypoxia resulting from anesthesia can be dangerous. Thus, anesthesiologists generally recommend postponing surgery until the 1st trimester. From a logical point of view, fetal exposure to anesthetic agents will be less during spinal anesthesia in contrast to general anesthesia; nonetheless, very few studies have supported the fact that spinal anesthesia is safer than general anesthesia and vice versa [37]. Of the total 16 studies included in this review, only three discussed anesthetic considerations for spinal surgery during pregnancy [12,16,25] and used general anesthesia. None of these studies reported any anesthesia-specific complication in patients who received anesthesia for the management of spinal injury during pregnancy. The lack of anesthesia-specific information in the included studies is one of the major limitations of this systematic review. Rehabilitation of pregnant women with acute spinal injury is challenging due to difficulties with positioning, nursing care, mobilization, and transfers [25]. Increased weight and protuberant abdomen pose additional difficulties in transfers and mobilization, leading to greater dependence. Fear of fetal loss due to trauma, misconceptions about pregnancy, disability, and rehabilitation are some other factors that can delay rehabilitation in these patients [7]. No specific guidelines are available for the rehabilitation of this patient population, which is another obstacle to their rehabilitation. Pregnant women with acute spinal injury or SCI can be rehabilitated in the same way as other patients with spinal injury or SCI as long as precautions are taken to account for the growing fetus, and special attention should be given to changing activities according to gestational age. In addition to normal physiological changes of pregnancy, patients with acute spinal injury undergo physiological changes caused by their injury, which increases the risk of developing secondary complications [19]. For example, pregnant women at baseline are five times more likely to develop deep venous thrombosis than non-pregnant women of the same age, while SCI further increases the risk due to immobilization [2,25]. Besides deep venous thrombosis, other complications reported in this review were urinary tract infections, pressure sores, anemia, depression, and spasticity. AD is another major and life-threatening complication in pregnant patients with SCI and injury level at or above T6. It can occur at any stage, but is common during labor and delivery [7,23,25]. In this review, two women developed AD: one woman developed AD during delivery and died shortly after delivering a premature baby, and the other woman had three episodes of AD during cervical spine fixation. A few studies have reported that severe trauma during pregnancy has negative outcomes in most cases [3,5,9]. Trauma has been associated with an increased risk of spontaneous abortion, premature labor, fetal distress, and stillbirth [39]. However, the results of our systematic review revealed that 77% of the women who sustained injury during pregnancy delivered normal healthy babies. The majority of the included studies have reported that an interdisciplinary team approach is the only way to manage this unique patient population [2,6,7,12]. Our review indicates that evidence is insufficient to suggest that spinal injury during pregnancy is strongly associated with fetal loss and abnormality. However, 1st trimester spinal injury can result in a myriad of fetus-related complications [3,9,10,29], and our findings also indicate poor obstetric outcomes in women who sustained spinal injury during the 1st trimester. The exact mechanisms on how traumatic spinal injury affects obstetric outcomes are not fully understood; however, placental abruption or uterine rupture due to trauma, spinal shock, direct fetal injuries, vertebral dislocations, AD, and other trauma-specific complications can be the cause of poor obstetric outcomes in women who sustain traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy. The authors failed to find any literature that explains whether injuries to the spinal cord or damage to neural signaling pathways have direct association with obstetric outcomes. Given the scarcity of high-quality research studies, the results of this review do not provide high-quality evidence. According to Ackley et al. [40], evidence from systematic reviews of descriptive studies provide level V evidence [41]; therefore, this study provides poor-quality evidence.

Conclusions

To our knowledge, this systematic review is the first to report obstetric outcomes in women who sustained traumatic spinal injury during pregnancy. The results of this review suggest that pregnancy outcomes are significantly affected if injury occurs during the 1st trimester of pregnancy; however, injuries sustained during the 2nd and 3rd trimesters can have good obstetric outcomes. Given the limited available literature, we are unable to draw conclusions about what constitutes optimal care and management of these patients, but it is likely to include an interdisciplinary team approach, especially given the challenges of managing both the patient and the growing fetus. Future research should focus on the development of clinical guidelines for the management of these patients. Moreover, worldwide data on these patients should be collected to truly determine the influence of spinal injury on obstetric outcomes.
  34 in total

1.  Epidemiology, Clinical Features and Consequences of Spinal Cord Injury in Children.

Authors:  Haider Darain; Aatik Arsh; Amir Zeb; Syed Muhammad Ilyas; Dildar Muhammad; Muhammad Naseem Khan
Journal:  J Coll Physicians Surg Pak       Date:  2018-07       Impact factor: 0.711

2.  Management of a pregnant patient with a burst fracture causing neurologic injury. A case report.

Authors:  Christopher J Lenarz; Catherine M Wittgen; Howard M Place
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 5.284

3.  Thoracolumbar distraction fractures in advanced pregnancy: a contribution of two case reports.

Authors:  P Tanchev; D Dikov; H Novkov
Journal:  Eur Spine J       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 3.134

4.  Risk factors for maternal injuries in a population-based sample of pregnant women.

Authors:  Karisa K Harland; Audrey F Saftlas; Jerome Yankowitz; Corinne Peek-Asa
Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 2.681

5.  Spinal cord injury during the second trimester of pregnancy.

Authors:  Ahmad Zaheer Qureshi; Sami Ullah; Anas Jehad AlSaleh; Rubina' Ullah
Journal:  Spinal Cord Ser Cases       Date:  2017-08-10

6.  Fetal deaths related to maternal injury.

Authors:  H B Weiss; T J Songer; A Fabio
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2001-10-17       Impact factor: 56.272

7.  Consequences of traumatic spinal cord injury during pregnancy in Pakistan.

Authors:  Aatik Arsh; Haider Darain; Syed Muhammad Ilyas; Amir Zeb
Journal:  Spinal Cord Ser Cases       Date:  2017-07-13

8.  Pregnancy and women with spinal cord injuries.

Authors:  Alessandro Ghidini; Alexis Healey; Marianna Andreani; Maureen R Simonson
Journal:  Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 3.636

9.  Labor analgesia for the parturient with spinal cord injury: what does an obstetrician need to know?

Authors:  Krzysztof M Kuczkowski
Journal:  Arch Gynecol Obstet       Date:  2006-02-22       Impact factor: 2.344

10.  Acute traumatic cervical spinal cord injury in a third-trimester pregnant female with good maternal and fetal outcome: a case report and literature review.

Authors:  Ashok Reddy Pedaballe; Harvinder Singh Chhabra; Vikas Tandon; Parashuram Chauhan; Rachna Verma
Journal:  Spinal Cord Ser Cases       Date:  2018-10-23
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