Hassid Victor J, Schinco Miren A, Tepas Joseph J, Griffen Margaret M, Murphy Terri L, Frykberg Eric R, Kerwin Andrew J
Department of Surgery, University of Florida Health Science Center, Jacksonville, Florida 32209, USA.
J Trauma. 2008 Dec;65(6):1328-32. doi: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31818d07e4.
Respiratory complications can undermine outcome from low cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) (C5-T1). Most devastating of these is catastrophic loss of airway control. This study sought to determine the incidence and effect of catastrophic airway loss (CLA) and to define the need for elective intubation with subsequent tracheostomy to prevent potentially fatal outcomes.
A database of 54,838 consecutive patients treated in a level I trauma center between January 1988 and December 2004 was queried to identify patients with low cervical SCI, without traumatic brain injury. Patients were then stratified into complete or incomplete SCI groups, based on clinical assessment of their SCI. Mortality, age, injury severity, need for intubation, and tracheostomy were analyzed for each group using Fisher's exact test or Student's t test, as appropriate, accepting p < 0.05 as significant.
One hundred eighty-six patients met inclusion criteria. The majority of low cervical spinal cord injuries were complete (58%). Overall, 127 (68%) patients required intubation, 88 (69%) required tracheostomy, and 27 died (15% of study population). Between each group there were significant differences in age and Injury Severity Score, however, within each group there were no significant differences in either. Eleven CSCI patients were not intubated; four of whom were at family request. Six of the remaining seven patients encountered fatal catastrophic airway loss. One patient was discharged to rehabilitation. Patients with incomplete SCI required intubation less frequently (38%); however, 50% of those required tracheostomy for intractable pulmonary failure.
These data indicate that regardless of severity of low cervical SCI, immediate, thorough evaluation for respiratory failure is necessary. Early intubation is mandatory for CSCI patients. For incomplete patients evidence of respiratory failure should prompt immediate airway intervention, half of whom will require tracheostomy.
呼吸并发症会影响下颈椎脊髓损伤(C5-T1)的预后。其中最严重的是气道控制的灾难性丧失。本研究旨在确定灾难性气道丧失(CLA)的发生率和影响,并确定是否需要选择性插管并随后进行气管切开术以预防潜在的致命后果。
查询了1988年1月至2004年12月在一级创伤中心接受治疗的54838例连续患者的数据库,以识别无创伤性脑损伤的下颈椎脊髓损伤患者。然后根据对其脊髓损伤的临床评估,将患者分为完全性或不完全性脊髓损伤组。使用Fisher精确检验或Student t检验对每组的死亡率、年龄、损伤严重程度、插管需求和气管切开术需求进行分析,以p<0.05为有统计学意义。
186例患者符合纳入标准。大多数下颈椎脊髓损伤为完全性损伤(58%)。总体而言,127例(68%)患者需要插管,88例(69%)需要气管切开术,27例死亡(占研究人群的15%)。每组之间在年龄和损伤严重程度评分上存在显著差异,然而,每组内部在这两方面均无显著差异。11例完全性脊髓损伤患者未插管;其中4例是应家属要求。其余7例患者中有6例发生了致命的灾难性气道丧失。1例患者出院接受康复治疗。不完全性脊髓损伤患者插管频率较低(38%);然而,其中50%因顽固性呼吸衰竭需要气管切开术。
这些数据表明,无论下颈椎脊髓损伤的严重程度如何,都有必要对呼吸衰竭进行即时、全面的评估。对于完全性脊髓损伤患者,早期插管是必需的。对于不完全性脊髓损伤患者,呼吸衰竭的证据应促使立即进行气道干预,其中一半患者需要气管切开术。