Department of Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis Children's Hospital, One Children's Place, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2011 Aug;58(2):145-55. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2010.08.038. Epub 2010 Oct 29.
Cervical spine injuries in children are rare. However, immobilization and imaging for potential cervical spine injury after trauma are common and are associated with adverse effects. Risk factors for cervical spine injury have been developed to safely limit immobilization and radiography in adults, but not in children. The purpose of our study is to identify risk factors associated with cervical spine injury in children after blunt trauma.
We conducted a case-control study of children younger than 16 years, presenting after blunt trauma, and who received cervical spine radiographs at 17 hospitals in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) between January 2000 and December 2004. Cases were children with cervical spine injury. We created 3 control groups of children free of cervical spine injury: (1) random controls, (2) age and mechanism of injury-matched controls, and (3) for cases receiving out-of-hospital emergency medical services (EMS), age-matched controls who also received EMS care. We abstracted data from 3 sources: PECARN hospital, referring hospital, and out-of-hospital patient records. We performed multiple logistic regression analyses to identify predictors of cervical spine injury and calculated the model's sensitivity and specificity.
We reviewed 540 records of children with cervical spine injury and 1,060, 1,012, and 702 random, mechanism of injury, and EMS controls, respectively. In the analysis using random controls, we identified 8 factors associated with cervical spine injury: altered mental status, focal neurologic findings, neck pain, torticollis, substantial torso injury, conditions predisposing to cervical spine injury, diving, and high-risk motor vehicle crash. Having 1 or more factors was 98% (95% confidence interval 96% to 99%) sensitive and 26% (95% confidence interval 23% to 29%) specific for cervical spine injury. We identified similar risk factors in the other analyses.
We identified an 8-variable model for cervical spine injury in children after blunt trauma that warrants prospective refinement and validation.
儿童颈椎损伤较为罕见。然而,儿童在创伤后常需要进行颈椎损伤的固定和影像学检查,这会带来潜在的不良影响。目前已经开发出了用于成人的颈椎损伤风险因素,以安全地限制颈椎固定和影像学检查,但这些方法不适用于儿童。本研究旨在确定与儿童钝性创伤后颈椎损伤相关的风险因素。
我们对 2000 年 1 月至 2004 年 12 月期间,在小儿急诊护理应用研究网络(PECARN)的 17 家医院就诊的、年龄小于 16 岁、有钝性创伤且接受过颈椎 X 线检查的患儿进行了病例对照研究。病例组为颈椎损伤患儿。我们创建了 3 组无颈椎损伤的对照组患儿:(1)随机对照,(2)年龄和损伤机制匹配对照,(3)对于接受院外急救医疗服务(EMS)的病例组患儿,选择年龄匹配且也接受 EMS 护理的对照患儿。我们从 3 个来源(PECARN 医院、转诊医院和院外患者记录)提取数据。我们进行了多项逻辑回归分析以确定颈椎损伤的预测因素,并计算了模型的敏感性和特异性。
我们回顾了 540 例颈椎损伤患儿和 1060、1012、702 例随机、损伤机制和 EMS 对照组患儿的记录。在随机对照分析中,我们确定了 8 个与颈椎损伤相关的因素:意识改变、局灶性神经功能障碍、颈部疼痛、斜颈、躯干严重损伤、颈椎损伤易患条件、跳水和高风险机动车碰撞。存在 1 个或更多这些因素的患儿颈椎损伤的敏感性为 98%(95%置信区间 96%至 99%),特异性为 26%(95%置信区间 23%至 29%)。我们在其他分析中也发现了类似的危险因素。
我们确定了一个 8 变量模型,可用于预测儿童钝性创伤后颈椎损伤,该模型需要进一步前瞻性优化和验证。