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External Multicenter Study of Reliability and Reproducibility for Lower Cervical Spine Injuries Classification Systems-Part 2: An Analysis of the Subaxial Cervical Spine Injury Classification and Cervical Spine Injury Severity Score Scale.

Andrey GrinVladimir KrylovIvan LvovAleksandr TalypovDmitriy DzukaevAnton KordonskiyVladimir SmirnovVasily KaranadzeBoburmirzo AbdukhalikovUlugbek KhushnazarovArtem AirapetyanAleksandr DmitrievAleksandr KaykovAlexander PeykerVitaliy SemchenkoAndrey AksenovAnton BorzenkovVladimir GulyySoslan TorchinovSergey BagaevAnton ToporskiyAlik KalandariDenis KasatkinAleksey SytnikValeriy LebedevDmitry EpifanovDmitriy HovrinVictor FeniksovDaniyar Choriev
Published in: Global spine journal (2019)
Our study demonstrated better management reliability, sensitivity, and reproducibility for the SLIC, which provided moderate interrater agreement with moderate to excellent intraclass correlation coefficient indicators for all raters. The CSISS demonstrated high reproducibility; however, large variability in answers prevented raters from reaching a moderate level of agreement. Magnetic resonance imaging integration may increase sensitivity of CSISS in relation to fracture management.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • high intensity
  • machine learning
  • deep learning
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance
  • contrast enhanced
  • hip fracture