Cervical spine injury: clinical and medico-legal overview.
Christian ZanzaGilda TornatoreCristina NaturaleYaroslava LonghitanoAngela SavianoAndrea PiccioniAniello MaieseMichela FerraraGianpietro VolonninoGiuseppe BertozziRoberta GrassiFabrizio DonatiMichele Ahmed Antonio KarabouePublished in: La Radiologia medica (2023)
Spinal trauma is an important cause of disability worldwide. Injury to the cervical spine (CS) occurs frequently after major trauma. 5-10% of patients with blunt trauma have a cervical spine injury. The cervical spine accounts for ~ 50% of all spinal injuries. Determination of CS stability is a common challenge in the acute care setting of patients with trauma. Several issues, indeed, are of particular concern: who needs CS imaging; what imaging should be obtained; when should computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or flexion/extension (F/E) radiographs be obtained; and how is significant ligamentous injury excluded in the comatose patient. CT and MRI both have roles to play. This article aims to present the different imaging to frame techniques to be used with greater precision in the acute event also for the purpose of planning the next therapeutic process. An overview of the applicability of the same methods in forensic pathology is also provided highlighting possible future biomarker to ease in diagnosis of acute TBI.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- trauma patients
- high resolution
- positron emission tomography
- acute care
- dual energy
- liver failure
- spinal cord
- magnetic resonance
- respiratory failure
- diffusion weighted imaging
- case report
- multiple sclerosis
- drug induced
- cardiac arrest
- intensive care unit
- mass spectrometry
- hepatitis b virus
- pet ct
- mild traumatic brain injury
- solid phase extraction
- mechanical ventilation