Abstract

BackgroundEarly routine intubation in motor-complete cervical spinal cord injury (CSCI) above the C5 level is a conventional protocol to prevent unexpected respiratory exacerbation (RE). However, in the context of recent advances in multidisciplinary respiratory management, the absolute indication for intubation in patients with CSCI based on initial neurologic assessment is controversial because of the drawbacks of intubation. This study aimed to redetermine the most important predictor of RE following CSCI after admission without routine intubation among patients admitted with motor-complete injury and/or injury above the C5 level to ensure timely intubation.MethodsWe performed a retrospective review of patients with acute traumatic CSCI admitted to our hospital without an initial routine intubation protocol from January 2013 to December 2017. CSCI patients who developed RE (defined as unexpected emergent intubation for respiratory resuscitation) were compared with those who did not. Baseline characteristics and severity of trauma data were collected. Univariate analyses were performed to compare treatment data and clinical outcomes between the two groups. Further, multivariate logistic regression was performed with clinically important independent variables: motor-complete injury, neurologic level above C5, atelectasis, and copious airway secretion (CAS).ResultsAmong 58 patients with CSCI, 35 (60.3%) required post-injury intubation and 1 (1.7%) died during hospitalization. Thirteen (22.4%) had RE 3.5 days (mean) post-injury; 3 (37.5%) of eight patients with motor-complete CSCI above C5 developed RE. Eleven of the 27 (40.7%) patients with motor-complete injury and five of the 22 (22.7%) patients with neurologic injury above C5 required emergency intubation at RE. Three of the eight CSCI patients with both risk factors (motor-complete injury above C5) resulted in emergent RE intubation (37.5%). CAS was an independent predictor for RE (odds ratio 7.19, 95% confidence interval 1.48–42.72, P = 0.0144) in multivariate analyses.ConclusionTimely intubation post-CSCI based on close attention to CAS during the acute 3-day phase may prevent RE and reduce unnecessary invasive airway control even without immediate routine intubation in motor-complete injury above C5.

Highlights

  • Routine intubation in motor-complete cervical spinal cord injury (CSCI) above the C5 level is a conventional protocol to prevent unexpected respiratory exacerbation (RE)

  • The Supplementary Figure shows the clinical trajectories of airway control in the 66 enrolled patients with CSCI, including eight who underwent empiric tracheostomy, to summarize the overall invasive airway management in this study

  • Eleven patients were intubated pre-admission for the following causes: unstable airway due to acute traumatic retropharyngeal hematoma (n = 5), hypoxemia or hypercapnia associated with abdominal breathing (n = 4), and circulatory collapse with neurogenic shock (n = 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Routine intubation in motor-complete cervical spinal cord injury (CSCI) above the C5 level is a conventional protocol to prevent unexpected respiratory exacerbation (RE). In the context of recent advances in multidisciplinary respiratory management, the absolute indication for intubation in patients with CSCI based on initial neurologic assessment is controversial because of the drawbacks of intubation. Despite advances in the multidisciplinary respiratory management of spinal cord injury, the protocol of absolute indications for routine intubation based on initial neurological assessment has not changed worldwide for nearly two decades. It is challenging to correctly determine the motor level and type of lesion (complete or incomplete) for physicians providing primary care for patients with CSCI [6], but the latest ENLS protocol (2019, fourth version) does not change the classic absolute indications for early routine intubation in CSCI based on initial neurological assessment [7]. Copious sputum is not yet included in the general parameters for urgent intubation in the 2019 ENLS protocol [7]

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