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. 2023 Jul;54(7):110771.
doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2023.05.003. Epub 2023 May 6.

Cervical spine trauma - Evaluating the diagnostic power of CT, MRI, X-Ray and LODOX

Affiliations

Cervical spine trauma - Evaluating the diagnostic power of CT, MRI, X-Ray and LODOX

Niklas Rutsch et al. Injury. 2023 Jul.

Abstract

Background: Traumatic cervical spine (c-spine) injuries account for 10% of all spinal injuries. The c-spine is prone to injury by blunt acceleration/deceleration traumas. The Canadian C-Spine rule and NEXUS criteria guide clinical decision-making but lack consensus on imaging modality when necessary. This study aims to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of CT, MRI, X-Ray, and, for the first time, LODOX-Statscan in identifying c-spine injuries in patients with blunt trauma and neck pain.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective monocenter cohort study using patient data from the emergency department at Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland's largest level one trauma center. We identified patients presenting with trauma and neck pain during the recruitment period from 01.01.2012 to 31.12.2017. We included all patients that required a radiographic c-spine evaluation according to the NEXUS criteria. Certified spine surgeons reviewed each case, analyzed patient demographics, injury classification, trauma mechanism, and emergency management. The retrospective full case review was established as gold standard to decide whether the c-spine was injured. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated for CT, MRI, LODOX, and X-Ray imaging methods.

Results: We identified 4996 patients, of which 2321 met the inclusion criteria. 91.3% (n = 2120) patients received a CT scan, 8.9% (n = 206) a MRI, 9.3% (n = 215) an X-ray, and 21.5% (n = 498) a LODOX scan. By retrospective case review, 186 participants were classified as injured. The sensitivity of CT was 88.6% (specificity 99%), and 89.8% (specificity 99.2%) with orthopedic surgeon consultation. MRI had a sensitivity of 88.5% (specificity of 96.9%); highlighting 14 cases correctly diagnosed as injured by MRI and misdiagnosed by CT. Projection radiography (36.4% sensitivity, 95.1% specificity) and LODOX (5.3% sensitivity, 100% specificity) were unsuitable for ruling out spinal injury.

Conclusion: While CT offers high sensitivity for detecting traumatic c-spine injury, MRI holds clinical significance in revealing injuries not recognized by CT in symptomatic patients. LODOX and projection radiography are insufficient for accurately ruling out c-spine injury. For patients with neurological symptoms, we recommend extended MRI use when CT scans are negative.

Keywords: CT; LODOX; MRI; NEXUS; Sensitivity; emergency medicine; neck injury; plain radiograph; spinal injuries; trauma.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest NR, PA, AKE, SFB, and CEA declare no interests. LMB receives consulting fees by Icotec and Kuros, which are paid to institution, and is board member at Sentryx, which is paid to institution. LMB is member of AOSpine and SwissOrthopedics. FS receives institutional funding by the Swiss National Science Foundation unrelated to the underlying manuscript. FS has received honoraria and travel expenses by Geistlich Pharma AG. MM receives the Swiss Heart Foundation Research Grant (2022), International Emergency Care Foundation Grant (2022) and Summer-School on Refugee and Migrant Health - research grant from Burgergemeinde (2022).

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