Boden Barry P, Tacchetti Robin L, Cantu Robert C, Knowles Sarah B, Mueller Frederick O
The Orthopaedic Center, 9711 Medical Center Dr, #201, Rockville, MD 20850, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2006 Aug;34(8):1223-32. doi: 10.1177/0363546506288306. Epub 2006 Jun 30.
Catastrophic cervical spine injuries in football are rare but tragic events.
To update the incidence of catastrophic cervical injuries in scholastic football players and identify new injury patterns.
Descriptive epidemiology study.
The authors retrospectively reviewed 196 incidents of catastrophic high school and collegiate football injuries reported to the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research during 13 academic years (September 1989 through June 2002).
There were 15.08 direct catastrophic cervical spine injuries in scholastic football participants per year, an incidence of 1.10 and 4.72 injuries per 100 000 high school and 100 000 college participants, respectively. Seventy-six athletes had quadriplegia (5.85 per year), 0.50 per 100 000 high school players and 0.82 per 100 000 college players. Spear tackling by players on defense continued to be the predominant mechanism of injury causing quadriplegia. Five athletes had a Brown-Séquard-like syndrome; only 1 made a full recovery. One athlete with Brown-Séquard-like syndrome and permanent neurologic symptoms reported a cervical cord neurapraxia event before the study period. Forty-three athletes (3.31 per year) had diagnosed cervical cord neurapraxia. In addition to hyperflexion and hyperextension injuries, axial forces were found to cause cervical cord neurapraxia. Sixteen of the 43 athletes returned to football after a cervical cord neurapraxia episode, and none of the 16 suffered a permanent quadriplegic event. Nine athletes sustained an isolated injury at the C1 or C2 level, and 7 sustained a combined injury at the C1, or C2 level and at a subaxial level.
The total number of quadriplegic events for high school and college football players is approximately 6 per year, with a higher incidence at the college level. Cervical cord neurapraxia can be caused by hyperflexion, hyperextension, and axial compression forces. Upper level cervical injuries involving the atlas and axis can occur in football players and may be associated with noncontiguous subaxial injuries.
橄榄球运动中灾难性颈椎损伤虽罕见但却很悲惨。
更新高中和大学橄榄球运动员灾难性颈椎损伤的发生率,并确定新的损伤模式。
描述性流行病学研究。
作者回顾性分析了13个学年(1989年9月至2002年6月)向国家灾难性运动损伤研究中心报告的196例高中和大学橄榄球灾难性损伤事件。
高中橄榄球参与者每年有15.08例直接灾难性颈椎损伤,每10万名高中参与者和每10万名大学参与者中的发生率分别为1.10例和4.72例。76名运动员发生四肢瘫痪(每年5.85例),每10万名高中球员中有0.50例,每10万名大学球员中有0.82例。防守球员的矛式擒抱仍然是导致四肢瘫痪的主要损伤机制。5名运动员患有类布朗 - 塞卡尔综合征;只有1人完全康复。1名患有类布朗 - 塞卡尔综合征且有永久性神经症状的运动员在研究期间之前报告过颈髓神经失用事件。43名运动员(每年3.31例)被诊断为颈髓神经失用。除了过屈和过伸损伤外,轴向力也被发现可导致颈髓神经失用。43名运动员中有16名在颈髓神经失用发作后重返橄榄球运动,这16人中无人发生永久性四肢瘫痪事件。9名运动员在C1或C2水平遭受孤立损伤,7名运动员在C1或C2水平以及下颈椎水平遭受复合损伤。
高中和大学橄榄球运动员每年四肢瘫痪事件总数约为6例,大学水平的发生率更高。颈髓神经失用可由过屈、过伸和轴向压缩力引起。橄榄球运动员可能发生涉及寰椎和枢椎的上位颈椎损伤,且可能与不连续的下颈椎损伤相关。