Intensive Care Physician-Led Clearance of the Cervical Spine: A Retrospective Review of the Utility of a Normal Cervical CT Scan for Safe Removal of Hard Collars by Critical Care Physicians.
Abdalla K H HasandarrasGustav F StrandvikAhmed El FaramawyNoreddin Nasereldin AreibiBasil YounisAhammed MekkodothilAyman El-MenyerSandro RizoliHassan Al-ThaniPublished in: Journal of intensive care medicine (2023)
Background: Cervical spine clearance in intubated patients due to blunt trauma remains contentious. Accumulating evidence suggests that a normal computed tomography (CT) cervical spine can be used to clear the cervical spine and remove the collar in unconscious patients presenting to the emergency department. However, whether this strategy can safely be employed by critical care physicians with intubated patients admitted to the trauma intensive care unit (TICU) with cervical collars in situ, has not been definitively studied. Methods: A retrospective review of 730 intubated victims of trauma who presented to the Level 1 Trauma center of a tertiary hospital was conducted. The rates of missed cervical injuries in patients who had their cervical collars removed by intensive care physicians based on a normal CT scan of the cervical spine, were reviewed. Secondary outcomes included rates of collar-related complications. Results: Three hundred and fifty patients had their cervical collars removed by Trauma ICU doctors based on a high-quality, radiologist-interpreted normal CT cervical spine. Seventy percent of patients were sedated and/or comatose at the time of collar removal. Fifty-one percent of patients had concomitant traumatic brain injury. The average GCS at time of collar removal was 9. The incidence of missed neurological injury discerned clinically at time of both ICU and hospital discharge was nil (negative predictive value 100%). The rate of collar-related complications was 2%. Conclusion: Cervical collar removal by intensive care physicians on TICU following normal CT cervical spine, is safe, provided certain quality conditions related to the CT scan are met. Not removing the collar early may be associated with increased complications. An algorithm is suggested to assist critical care decision-making in this patient cohort.
Keyphrases
- computed tomography
- end stage renal disease
- intensive care unit
- emergency department
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- traumatic brain injury
- primary care
- chronic kidney disease
- dual energy
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- image quality
- positron emission tomography
- contrast enhanced
- type diabetes
- risk factors
- machine learning
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- case report
- magnetic resonance
- mechanical ventilation
- brain injury
- blood brain barrier