Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco.
Brain and Spinal Injury Center, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco; and.
Neurosurg Focus. 2017 Nov;43(5):E19. doi: 10.3171/2017.7.FOCUS17396.
Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) often occurs in patients with concurrent traumatic injuries in other body systems. These patients with polytrauma pose unique challenges to clinicians. The current review evaluates existing guidelines and updates the evidence for prehospital transport, immobilization, initial resuscitation, critical care, hemodynamic stability, diagnostic imaging, surgical techniques, and timing appropriate for the patient with SCI who has multisystem trauma. Initial management should be systematic, with focus on spinal immobilization, timely transport, and optimizing perfusion to the spinal cord. There is general evidence for the maintenance of mean arterial pressure of > 85 mm Hg during immediate and acute care to optimize neurological outcome; however, the selection of vasopressor type and duration should be judicious, with considerations for level of injury and risks of increased cardiogenic complications in the elderly. Level II recommendations exist for early decompression, and additional time points of neurological assessment within the first 24 hours and during acute care are warranted to determine the temporality of benefits attributable to early surgery. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis using low-molecular-weight heparin is recommended by current guidelines for SCI. For these patients, titration of tidal volumes is important to balance the association of earlier weaning off the ventilator, with its risk of atelectasis, against the risk for lung damage from mechanical overinflation that can occur with prolonged ventilation. Careful evaluation of infection risk is a priority following multisystem trauma for patients with relative immunosuppression or compromise. Although patients with polytrauma may experience longer rehabilitation courses, long-term neurological recovery is generally comparable to that in patients with isolated SCI after controlling for demographics. Bowel and bladder disorders are common following SCI, significantly reduce quality of life, and constitute a focus of targeted therapies. Emerging biomarkers including glial fibrillary acidic protein, S100β, and microRNAs for traumatic SCIs are presented. Systematic management approaches to minimize sources of secondary injury are discussed, and areas requiring further research, implementation, and validation are identified.
创伤性脊髓损伤 (SCI) 常发生于伴有其他系统创伤的患者。这些多发创伤患者给临床医生带来了独特的挑战。本综述评估了现有的指南,并更新了有关院前转运、固定、初始复苏、重症监护、血流动力学稳定、诊断成像、手术技术以及适合伴有多发创伤的 SCI 患者的时机的证据。初始管理应系统进行,重点是脊柱固定、及时转运和优化脊髓灌注。目前有一般证据表明,在立即和急性护理期间维持平均动脉压 > 85mmHg 可优化神经功能预后;然而,应谨慎选择血管加压药的类型和持续时间,并考虑损伤程度和老年人心肌并发症风险增加的情况。存在早期减压的 II 级推荐,并且在最初 24 小时内和急性护理期间需要进行额外的神经评估时间点,以确定早期手术归因于获益的时效性。目前的 SCI 指南推荐使用低分子量肝素进行静脉血栓栓塞预防。对于这些患者,潮气量的滴定很重要,既要平衡尽早脱离呼吸机的关联,也要平衡因机械过度充气导致的肺损伤风险,而机械过度充气可能与长时间通气有关。多发创伤后,对相对免疫抑制或受损的患者进行感染风险的仔细评估是优先事项。尽管多发创伤患者可能经历更长的康复过程,但在控制人口统计学因素后,总体上与单纯 SCI 患者的长期神经恢复相当。SCI 后常见的肠道和膀胱功能障碍会显著降低生活质量,成为靶向治疗的重点。还介绍了包括胶质纤维酸性蛋白、S100β 和 miRNA 在内的用于创伤性 SCI 的新兴生物标志物。讨论了最小化继发性损伤来源的系统管理方法,并确定了需要进一步研究、实施和验证的领域。