Acute Management of Spinal Cord Injury

Acute Management of Spinal Cord Injury

Acute Management of Spinal Cord Injury Dan Rutigliano, D.O Director of Inpatient Trauma Stony Brook Trauma Center No financial disclosures OVERVIEW • Spinal anatomy/classification • Evaluating a patient with suspected spinal injury • Broad management principles of spinal injury • Hypovolaemic vs neurogenic vs spinal shock SPINAL CORD INJURY: EPIDEMIOLOGY In the United States, the incidence of spinal cord injury in 2010 was approximately 40 per million persons per year, or approximately 12,400 annually • Causes in the United States are: - Motor vehicle accidents: 48 percent - Falls: 16 percent - Violence (especially gunshot wounds): 12 percent - Sports accidents: 10 percent - Other: 14 percent Prior to 2000, the most frequent occurrence was a young male with a median age of 22. Since that time, the average age has increased to 37 years in 2010, presumably as a reflection of the aging population. Males continue to make up 77 to 80 percent of cases. Alcohol plays a role in at least 25 percent of TSCI ANATOMY Location of Spinal Injuries 55% in cervical region (mobile and exposed) 15% in thoracic region (less mobile and protected) 15% in thoracolumbar region (fulcrum) 15% in lumbosacral region ANATOMY • Upper cervical region is wide from foramen magnum to lower part C3 - 1/3 die at scene from apnea - those that survive are usually neurologically intact when they reach the hospital ANATOMY • Below C3 the diameter of the spinal canal is smaller - vertebral column injuries are more likely to produce spinal cord injuries • Most thoracic spine fractures are wedge compression fractures without spinal cord injury - high association with a complete spinal cord injury because of narrow thoracic canal • Thoracolumbar junction is where the inflexible thoracic spine meets the strong lumbar spine making it an area vulnerable to injury ANATOMY • Multiple ascending and descending tracts in the spinal cord • 3 clinically relevant ones - lateral corticospinal tract - Controls motor functions on SAME side - spinothalamic tract - transmits pain and temp sensations from the OPPOSITE side - dorsal columns - transmits proprioception and vibration senses from the SAME side ANATOMY Dermatome- area of skin supplied by a single spinal nerve or cord segment Myotome- the muscle/s supplied by a single spinal nerve or cord segment SPINAL CORD INJURY: CLASSIFICATION • Injuries to the spinal cord can be categorized in numerous ways - Incomplete paraplegia (incomplete thoracic injury) - Incomplete quadriplegia (incomplete cervical injury) - Complete paraplegia - Complete quadriplegia SPINAL CORD INJURY: CLASSIFICATION Injuries may have complete or incomplete neurological symptoms • Complete injury patients demonstrate total and flaccid paralysis, total anesthesia/analgesia, and no tendon reflexes • Incomplete injury will demonstrate partial paralysis w/ altered sensation and preserved sacral function (sacral sparing) SPINAL CORD INJURY: CLASSIFICATIONS Different patterns of injury can result in various “syndromes” • Central Cord Syndrome • Anterior Cord Syndrome • Posterior Cord Syndrome • Brown-Sequard Syndrome • Cauda Equina Syndrome SPINAL CORD INJURY: CLASSIFICATION Spinal injuries can also be described as: • Fractures • Fracture-dislocations • Penetrating injury • Spinal Cord Injury without Radiographic Abnormalities (SCIWRA) SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Signs and Symptoms: • Pain • Tingling, numbness and weakness in periphery • Loss of sensation or paralysis below the level of injury • Respiratory distress • Incontinence • Priapism SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Evaluation and care starts with the ABCs of trauma • A=airway - Need to establish an airway while maintaining c- spine immobilization - Place a definitive airway early if respiratory compromise is suspected- typically with high cervical injury (C3/4/5) SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Evaluation and care starts with the ABCs of trauma • B=breathing - evaluate for any associated symptoms to indicate underlying pulmonary trauma - monitor for accessory muscle use to indicate impending respiratory collapse - use supplemental oxygen to prevent hypoxia SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Evaluation and care starts with the ABCs of trauma • C=circulation - identify and control any bleeding from injuries - Maintain a normal blood pressure to prevent secondary spinal injury - ? spinal shock- aggressive fluid resuscitation, pressers may be required SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Evaluation and care starts with the ABCs of trauma • D=disability - Check patient’s GCS status - exam for equal and reactive pupils - evaluate all 4 extremities for signs of weakness or loss of sensation - perform a rectal exam to evaluate for sphincter tone - evaluate for priapism, bulbocavernosus reflex SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Evaluation and care starts with the ABCs of trauma • E=exposure - remove all clothes to fully evaluate for injuries - carefully log roll the pt to palpate the spine and paraspinal regions ‣ identify all areas of pain with palpation - patients with high spinal injuries may be vasodilated and unable to regulate temperature ‣ Cover patients with warm blankets SPINAL INJURY: EVALUATION Adjuncts to primary survey • Done after completion of ABCs • Patient should be on continuous monitoring of vitals • CXR and pelvic x-rays typically performed • FAST exam- bedside ultrasound to evaluate for bleeding in the abdomen as a source of hypotension • Placement of Foley catheter, OGT • Obtain a full medical history- important to ask about use of anticoagulants! SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Spinal Imaging • X-rays- not done as first line, provided limited information, can be difficult to obtain needed views • CT scan- gold standard for defining bony injuries, typically done as 1st line imaging as part of the trauma “pan scan” • MRI- useful to identify ligamentous injury or contusions/compression of the spinal cord SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Identify the level of spinal cord injury • Make note of both sensory and motor deficit levels ANATOMY Dermatome- area of skin supplied by a single spinal nerve or cord segment Myotome- the muscle/s supplied by a single spinal nerve or cord segment SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION Identify the level of spinal cord injury • Make note of both sensory and motor deficit levels SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Classification • Allows for standardized classification of spinal cord • Based on • severity of neurological deficit- A=complete to E=normal • the neurological level- identify the most caudal segment with normal function SPINAL CORD INJURY: EVALUATION SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Phases of injury • Primary spinal cord injury- injury to spinal cord directly related to fractures, dislocations, compression, bleeding • Secondary spinal injury- resulting from prolong mechanical instability or subsequent episodes of hypotension, hypoxia, infections SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Management principles: Stabilize the primary source of injury; prevent any secondary injury from occurring • Immobilization • IV fluid resuscitation • Medications • Surgery SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Strict immobilization • 5% of patients with existing injury experience a worsening or new onset of symptoms after arriving to the ED- poor immobilization techniques • use a cervical collar • if a pt needs intubation must maintain inline cervical stabilization • These are potentially difficult intubations • maintain patients flat and on bedrest until appropriate bracing is in place if appropriate SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT IV fluid resuscitation • maintain SBP > 90mm Hg • Normal saline bolus • If blood pressure is refractory to fluid resuscitation consider neurogenic shock SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Hypovolemic Shock vs Neurogenic SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Neurogenic Shock: • Mechanism- impairment of descending sympathetic pathways in the cervical or upper thorax (usually above T6) - Leads to a loss of vascular sympathetic motor tone ‣ Results in peripheral vasodilation, pooling of blood and hypotension - Loss of sympathetic stimulus to the heart (injury above T1) ‣ Results in bradycardia and lack of reflexive tachycardia response to hypotension SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Neurogenic Shock vs Spinal shock SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Spinal Shock: • Mechanism- transient loss of voluntary and reflexive neurologic function below the level of injury - Spinal cord dysfunction maybe transient but can last days to months - flaccid paralysis, bowel and bladder incontinence, priapism - first reflexes to return are bulbocavernosus and babinski SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Neurogenic Shock • Management - Hypotension: ‣ Bolus of crystalloid fluids- may require large amounts but beware of fluid overload and pulmonary edema ‣ Vasopressors- typically a pure alpha-blocking agent such as phenylephrine ‣ Goal is to maintain end organ perfusion- warm extremities, MAP >65mm Hg, UO >0.5cc/kr/hr - Bradycardia: treatment only needed if persistent hypotension ‣ Atropine given for acute therapy ‣ Pacemaker can be needed rarely in refractory cases ‣ Avoid over-zealous vagal stimulation such as NT suctioning, ETT manipulation, carotid massage SPINAL CORD INJURY: MANAGEMENT Medical therapy: • Corticosteroids- Aimed at reducing the extent of secondary spinal damage - Most trials have used high dose methylprednisolone ‣ to be given within 8 hrs from time of injury ‣ bolus first given followed by IV infusion for 24-48hrs - Insufficient evidence to

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