Cervical Spine Injury
Carolyn Calpin
Introduction
Cervical spine injury is relatively uncommon in children
Children more likely to sustain head trauma than cervical spine injury
Pediatric Differences
Increased mobility of the spine in children due to:
Laxity of ligaments and spinous muscles
Anterior wedging of vertebrae
Shallow (horizontal) plane of facet joints, predisposes to subluxation rather than bony injury
Poorly formed uncinate processes (lateral superior edge of vertebral body which forms bilateral ridges): risk of SCIWORA—Spinal Cord Injury Without Radiographic Abnormality
Larger head and weaker neck musculature in children cause 60-70% of C-spine fractures to occur in the C1/C2 range vs 16% in adults
More room around spinal cord in children; therefore, decreased incidence of neurologic deficits
More radiolucent cartilage in children, tapered (anterior sloped) vertebrae, multiple growth centers make X-rays difficult to interpret
Increased incidence of physiologic subluxation in children < 8 yrs: 24% at C2/C3, 14% at C3/C4
Age
Fulcrum
< 3
C2/C3
3-8
C3/C4
9-11
C4/C5
> 12
C5/C6
Variable interspinous distances especially between C6/C7, C1/C2
Cervical Spine Immobilization
Indications
Trauma with severe forces (motor vehicle accident, falls > child’s height)
Trauma associated with high-risk sports (diving, football, gymnastics, hockey)
Posttraumatic neck or back pain or tenderness
Posttraumatic limitation of neck mobility
Posttraumatic neurologic symptoms or signs
Multiple system trauma
Severe acceleration/deceleration events of the head
Suspected cervical neck injury for any reason
Trauma in a child with cervical spine vulnerability (Down syndrome, Klippel-Feil, Morquio, arthritis of the spine)
Immobilize with Cervical Collar and Spine Boards
Cervical Collar
Use appropriate size collar
If collar does not fit, use towels, other padding, or sandbags to deter movement
Spine Boards
Secure body as a unit:
Child’s neck is in relative kyphosis on hard spine board due to proportionately larger head size; can increase the risk of anterior subluxation with unstable fracture
Place padding under torso to extend head approximately 30° (neutral)
Align external auditory meatus with shoulders in a coronal plane
Tape head to board to prevent additional movement of cervical spine
Radiologic Approach
ABCs: Anatomy, Alignment, Bones, Cartilage, Soft Tissues
Anatomy | Visualize entire C-spine including C7-T1 junction | |
Alignment | Normal lordotic curves | |
▪ | Anterior vertebral line | |
▪ | Posterior vertebral line | |
▪ | Spinolaminar line | |
▪ | Spinous process tips | |
▪ | Superior tip of odontoid should align with anterior margin of foramen magnum | |
Bones | Anterior spinal column: vertebral bodies, intervertebral disc spaces | |
▪ | Posterior spinal column: pedicles, lamina, transverse processes, articulating pillars, spinous processes | |
▪ | Loss of height, abnormal wedging (> 3 mm), fractures | |
Cartilage | Intervertebral discs, growth plate | |
Soft Tissues | Predental, prevertebral spaces, anterior fat pad |