Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
NECK INJURIES

228 Surgical Emergencies


(v) MRI is more sensitive than CT and plain X-ray for identifying
soft-tissue damage such as ligamentous injuries, disc herniation
or a haemorrhage causing compression of the spinal cord or
cervical nerve roots
(a) it is rarely available in the acute situation, but may be
arranged subsequently.

MANAGEMENT
1 Always apply a semi-rigid collar, minimize head movements in any suspected
neck injury, and use laterally placed sandbags taped to the forehead to
prevent head rotation.
2 Arrange urgent airway control with orotracheal intubation for the un-
conscious patient or for respiratory distress.
(i) Only an airway-skilled doctor should perform this, usually by a
rapid sequence induction (RSI) intubation technique (see p. 467)
with in-line manual immobilization to protect the neck from any
movement.
3 Restore the circulatory volume if the patient is hypotensive.
(i) First look for sources of blood loss before diagnosing neurogenic
shock.
(ii) Neurogenic shock causes hypotension in a patient with a cervical
cord injury due to loss of sympathetic tone with vasodilation and
bradycardia.
(iii) Place a urinary catheter to monitor urinary output.
4 Severe ligamentous damage with cervical spine instability may occur, with
an apparent ly norma l X-ray.
(i) This is more likely in children, in whom up to 50% of serious
spinal injuries have normal X-rays (SCIWORA – spinal cord
injury without radiological abnormality).
(ii) Neck hyperextension may cause predominant weakness of the
arms in elderly patients with cervical spondylosis, without any
associated fracture or dislocation, known as the central cord
syndrome.
(iii) Arrange an MRI in these circumstances.
5 Refer all suspected cervical spine injuries to the orthopaedic or surgical team
and begin pressure-area nursing.
6 The value of high-dose methylprednisolone to improve neurological
outcome in patients with complete or incomplete spinal cord damage
remains unconvincing and controversial, and has been abandoned in many
centres.
(i) Start treatment within 8 h of injury, guided by the advice of the
regional spinal injuries unit.
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