Back to Search Start Over

Subaxial Cervical Spine Injuries: Treatment Recommendations of the German Orthopedic and Trauma Society

Authors :
Schleicher, Philipp
Scholz, Matti
Kandziora, Frank
Badke, Andreas
Brakopp, Florian Hans
Ekkerlein, Helmut Klaus Friedrich
Gercek, Erol
Hartensuer, Rene
Hartung, Philipp
Jarvers, Jan-Sven Gilbert
Kobbe, Philipp
Matschke, Stefan
Morrison, Robert
Mueller, Christian W.
Pishnamaz, Miguel
Reinhold, Maximilian
Schnake, Klaus John
Schmeiser, Gregor
Stein, Gregor
Ullrich, Bernhard
Weiss, Thomas
Zimmermann, Volker
Schleicher, Philipp
Scholz, Matti
Kandziora, Frank
Badke, Andreas
Brakopp, Florian Hans
Ekkerlein, Helmut Klaus Friedrich
Gercek, Erol
Hartensuer, Rene
Hartung, Philipp
Jarvers, Jan-Sven Gilbert
Kobbe, Philipp
Matschke, Stefan
Morrison, Robert
Mueller, Christian W.
Pishnamaz, Miguel
Reinhold, Maximilian
Schnake, Klaus John
Schmeiser, Gregor
Stein, Gregor
Ullrich, Bernhard
Weiss, Thomas
Zimmermann, Volker
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In a consensus process during four sessions in 2016, the working group lower cervical spine of the German Society for Orthopedic and Trauma Surgery (DGOU), formulated Therapeutic Recommendations for the Lower Cervical Spine, taking into consideration the current literature. Therapeutic goals are a permanently stable, painless cervical spine and the protection against secondary neurologic damage while retaining the greatest possible amount of motion and spinal profile. Due to its ease of use and its proven good reliability, the AOSpine classification for subaxial cervical injuries should be used. The Canadian C-Spine Rule is recommended as a clinical decision rule whether to perform imaging or not. If a structural or unstable injury is suspected by patient history or clinical findings, a spiral CT scan of the cervical spine is the favoured diagnosticmodality. Conventional X-ray is reserved for patients in whom there is no dangerous mechanism of injury. MR imaging is recommended in case of unexplained neurologic deficit, prior to closed reduction and open posterior surgery and to exclude disco-ligamentous injuries. Urgency of MR imaging depends on the specific findings. CT angiography is recommended in higher-grade facet joint injuries or in the presence of vertebra-basilar symptoms. Flexion-extension imaging is recommended only as a physician-guided dynamic fluoroscopy, when an unstable lesion is still suspected. The therapeutic strategy is mainly dependent on morphologic criteria, which are described using the AOSpine classification. A0-injuries are treated conservatively. A1- and A2-injuries are treated conservatively in the majority of cases, and in single cases a gross kyphotic deformity might indicate surgical stabilisation. A3-injuries do indicate a surgical therapy in the majority of cases, but certain cases might be treated conservatively. A4-fractures as well as B- and C-type injuries are to be treated surgically. Most injuries can be treated by anterior pla

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
German
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1201322588
Document Type :
Electronic Resource