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Current Analysis of Age and Cervical Spine Fractures Publisher Pubmed



Tafazolimoghadam A1 ; Radmard M2 ; Zinzuwadia S2 ; Amoah AA2 ; Chanmugam A2 ; Yousem DM2
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  2. 2. Johns Hopkins Medical Institution, Baltimore, United States

Source: Emergency Radiology Published:2024


Abstract

Purpose: The Canadian Cervical Spine Rule (CCR) was based on patient data from 25 years ago and recommended cervical spine computed tomography (CSCT) for trauma patients aged 65 and older. We sought to determine the differences in rate of symptomatic and asymptomatic fractures of trauma patients ≥ 65 and < 65 years old, given the changing demographics and heterogeneity in today’s elderly population. Methods: This retrospective study of CSCT results from two hospitals in our health system included 5 years of trauma patient data. In addition to the primary variable of fracture rates, we separated the patients into symptomatic / asymptomatic groups and ≥ 65 and < 65 years of age. Results: In the ≥ 65 age group, 190 fractures among 9455 CSCTs (2.0%) were identified (112 females = 58.9%); 29 (0.3%) were in asymptomatic patients. In patients < 65, there were 199 (1.6%) fractures out of 12,531 CSCTs of which 19 (0.15%) were asymptomatic and 46 were female (23.1%). The rates of fractures in the older cohort (2.0%) were substantially different than those reported in the original CCR articles (5.2% and 6.6%). However, the fracture rates reported for those < 65 (1.4% and 1.7% historically) were similar to the current findings (1.6%). Conclusion: The cervical spine fracture rate at our institution for patients ≥ 65, at 2.0%, was higher than those patients < 65 (1.6%) and favored female (58.9–23.1%) patients. The findings were much lower than those CCR percentages that led to scanning trauma patients who are 65 and older. Asymptomatic fractures are rarer still (0.15–0.30%). © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to American Society of Emergency Radiology (ASER) 2024.