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The impact of spine stability on cervical spinal cord injury with respect to demographics,management, and outcome: a prospective cohort from a national spinal cord injury registry
Authors:Jérôme Paquet  Carly S. Rivers  Dilnur Kurban  Joel Finkelstein  Jin W. Tee  Vanessa K. Noonan  Brian K. Kwon  R. John Hurlbert  Sean Christie  Eve C. Tsai  Henry Ahn  Brian Drew  Christopher S. Bailey  Daryl R. Fourney  Najmedden Attabib  Michael G. Johnson  Michael G. Fehlings  Stefan Parent  Marcel F. Dvorak
Abstract:

Background Context

Emergent surgery for patients with a traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is seen as the gold standard in acute management. However, optimal treatment for those with the clinical diagnosis of central cord syndrome (CCS) is less clear, and classic definitions of CCS do not identify a unique population of patients.

Purpose

The study aimed to test the authors' hypothesis that spine stability can identify a unique group of patients with regard to demographics, management, and outcomes, which classic CCS definitions do not.

Study Design/Setting

This is a prospective observational study.

Patient Sample

The sample included participants with cervical SCI included in a prospective Canadian registry.

Outcome Measures

The outcome measures were initial hospitalization length of stay, change in total motor score from admission to discharge, and in-hospital mortality.

Methods

Patients with cervical SCI from a prospective Canadian SCI registry were grouped into stable and unstable spine cohorts. Bivariate analyses were used to identify differences in demographic, injury, management, and outcomes. Multivariate analysis was used to better understand the impact of spine stability on motor score improvement. No conflicts of interest were identified.

Results

Compared with those with an unstable spine, patients with cervical SCI and a stable spine were older (58.8 vs. 44.1 years, p<.0001), more likely male (86.4% vs. 76.1%, p=.0059), and have more medical comorbidities. Patients with stable spine cervical SCI were more likely to have sustained their injury by a fall (67.4% vs. 34.9%, p<.0001), and have high cervical (C1–C4; 58.5% vs. 43.3%, p=.0009) and less severe neurologic injuries (ASIA Impairment Scale C or D; 81.3% vs. 47.5%, p<.0001). Those with stable spine injuries were less likely to have surgery (67.6% vs. 92.6%, p<.0001), had shorter in-hospital lengths of stay (median 84.0 vs. 100.5 days, p=.0062), and higher total motor score change (20.7 vs. 19.4 points, p=.0014). Multivariate modeling revealed that neurologic severity of injury and spine stability were significantly related to motor score improvement; patients with stable spine injuries had more motor score improvement.

Conclusions

We propose that classification of stable cervical SCI is more clinically relevant than classic CCS classification as this group was found to be unique with regard to demographics, neurologic injury, management, and outcome, whereas classic CCS classifications do not . This classification can be used to assess optimal management in patients where it is less clear if and when surgery should be performed.
Keywords:Central cord syndrome  Cervical spinal cord injury  Decompressive surgery  Incomplete spinal cord injury  Spinal cord injury  Spine stability  Spondylosis
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