Abstract

BackgroundThe thoracic segment represents the most common area fractured in the whole spine. Complete neurological deficits are commonly associated with thoracic injuries possibly due to a relatively small canal diameter as compared to the cervical or lumbar spine. Magnetic resonance is the gold standard of imaging, especially in patients suffering from neurological deficits as well as in soft tissue assessment mainly the disc, ligaments, and neural elements. The thoracolumbar injury classification and severity score system (TLICS) and the thoracolumbar AO Spine injury score (TLAOSIS), are two scoring systems designed to help surgeons in management plans of thoraco-lumbar injuries. The aim of our study is to compare these two main thoracolumbar injury classification systems in deciding the management strategies in thoraco-lumbar injuries. This study is a retrospective study that included 70 patients (42 males and 28 females) who suffered acute traumatic vertebral fractures. All patients underwent MRI including T1WI, T2W and STIR sequences. The MRI was viewed by two independent radiologists of 5- and 10-years’ experience and compared to surgical decisions.ResultsOut of 70 patients included in our study, the TL AOSIS matched treatment recommendation in 62 patients (88.6%), and the TLICS matched in 60 patients (85.7%). The TL AOSIS achieved sensitivity 95%, specificity 80%, while the TLICS achieved sensitivity 72.2%, specificity 100%.ConclusionBoth TL AOSIS and TLICS have very close results in their reliability for guiding treatment strategy, yet TL AOSIS matched treatment recommendation more than TLICS, with sensitivity more than TLICS, while TLICS had more specificity.

Highlights

  • Acute spine trauma has a devastating effect on both patients as well as their families [1].Thoracolumbar (TL) fractures are the commonest traumatic injuries of the spinal column, usually involving the levels T10 to L2 [2]

  • Conventional radiographs and computed tomography (CT) are the initial imaging modalities used in the diagnosis of spinal injuries [4]

  • Because MRI can assess nerve root, spinal cord, and posterior cruciate ligament (PLC) damage, it plays an important role after initial evaluation with CT and/or X-rays, especially when neurological damage is suspected [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Thoracolumbar (TL) fractures are the commonest traumatic injuries of the spinal column, usually involving the levels T10 to L2 [2]. This is possibly attributed to the small canal diameter contrary to the cervical or lumbar spine, which have a relatively wider canal [3]. The TLICS system was developed to aid in the diagnosis and decision-making of thoraco-lumbar spinal trauma [6]. Complete neurological deficits are commonly associated with thoracic injuries possibly due to a relatively small canal diameter as compared to the cervical or lumbar spine. The MRI was viewed by two independent radiologists of 5- and 10-years’ experience and compared to surgical decisions

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