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Spine

DETECTION OF THORACOLUMBAR VERTEBRAL FRACTURES ON TRAUMA SERIES CT SCANS MISSED BY CLINICAL EXAMINATION

British Association of Spinal Surgeons (BASS)



Abstract

Background

Thoracolumbar fractures are the most common spinal injuries resulting from blunt trauma. Missed spinal injuries can have serious consequences.

Objective

Our objectives were to determine the utility of trauma series chest and abdomen computed tomographs for detecting clinically unrecognised vertebral fractures and to analyse those missed on clinical examination. The aim was to identify an ‘at-risk’ patient group with negative clinical examination warranting evaluation with CT screening.

Material and Methods

We evaluated all computed tomography of the chest and/or abdominal that was undertaken for blunt trauma at our trauma centre from April 2009 to April 2010. Data was gathered from both CT scans and medical notes to capture demographics, mechanism of injury, fracture site and configuration. Key points were the clinical suspicion of vertebral fractures prior to CT request and identifying ‘at-risk’ patient group with factors contributing to difficulty in clinical interpretation.

Results

There were a total of 303 patients in the year who underwent CT scan for blunt trauma. 51(16.8%) had a thoracolumbar vertebral fracture. There were 8 women and 43 men a mean age of 45.2 years. There were 29 (56.8%) stable and 22 (43.2%) unstable fractures. Out of the 51 total fracture patients, only 17(33.3%) had been clinically anticipated with a positive clinical examination. In the 22 unstable fractures, only 11 (50%) were expected and had clinically recorded correlating positive examination findings.

Conclusion

A combination of both clinical examination and CT screening based on mechanism will likely be required to ensure adequate sensitivity with an acceptable specificity for the diagnosis of clinically significant injuries of the TL spine.