Abstract

PurposeCervical spine injury after blunt trauma in children is rare but can have severe consequences. Clear protocols for diagnostic workup are, therefore, needed, but currently not available. As a step in developing such a protocol, we determined the incidence of cervical spine injury and the degree of protocol adherence at our level 2 trauma centre.MethodsWe analysed data from all patients aged < 16 years suspected of cervical spine injury after blunt trauma who had presented to our hospital during two periods: January 2010 to June 2012, and January 2017 to June 2019. In the intervening period, the imaging protocol for diagnostic workup was updated. Outcomes were the incidence of cervical spine injury and protocol adherence in terms of the indication for imaging and the type of imaging.ResultsWe included 170 children in the first study period and 83 in the second. One patient was diagnosed with cervical spine injury. Protocol adherence regarding the indication for imaging was > 80% in both periods. Adherence regarding the imaging type decreased over time, with 45.8% of the patients receiving a primary CT scan in the second study period versus 2.9% in the first.ConclusionRadiographic imaging is frequently performed when clearing the paediatric cervical spine, although cervical spine injury is rare. Particularly CT scan usage has wrongly been emerging over time. Stricter adherence to current protocols could limit overuse of radiographic imaging, but ultimately there is a need for an accurate rule predicting which children really are at risk of injury.

Highlights

  • Paediatric patients suffering blunt trauma are always assessed for cervical spine injury (CSI) given the potential risk of morbidity and mortality [1,2,3]

  • CSI is rare, accounting for less than 2% of all children being evaluated after blunt trauma, even in higher risk populations presenting at level 1 trauma centres [4,5,6,7]

  • We conducted a retrospective cohort study that included all children under the age of 16 presenting at the emergency department (ED) of a Dutch level 2 trauma centre and large teaching hospital with suspected CSI after blunt trauma, for whom radiography of the cervical spine (C-spine) had been obtained

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Summary

Introduction

Paediatric patients suffering blunt trauma are always assessed for cervical spine injury (CSI) given the potential risk of morbidity and mortality [1,2,3]. CSI is rare, accounting for less than 2% of all children being evaluated after blunt trauma, even in higher risk populations presenting at level 1 trauma centres [4,5,6,7]. Trauma mechanisms in children differ from those in adults and are often associated with unique injury patterns, due to the anatomy of the paediatric cervical spine (C-spine) [5, 9, 10]. While CSI should not be missed, children at low risk of injury should not be subjected unnecessarily to radiation.

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