Correlation of clinical and radiological findings in patients with spinal trauma at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Central Hospital.

IF 0.9 Q4 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
SA Journal of Radiology Pub Date : 2025-12-20 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.4102/sajr.v29i1.3248
Lufuno J Badzhi, Timothy C Hardcastle, Pumersha Naidoo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Assessment of spinal trauma entails a full neurological examination and radiological assessment to determine the level of spinal cord injury.

Objectives: This study aimed to determine if further imaging is always required, whether the clinical picture correlates with imaging results and to compare clinical and radiological prediction accuracy.

Method: This retrospective chart review compared and correlated clinical findings with radiological findings in patients with spinal trauma at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Central Hospital over a period of 6 years. Demographics and sensitivity and specificity of clinical to imaging correlation with positive predictive ratios were assessed.

Results: A total of 290 patients admitted with spinal injury, who received CT and/or MRI, were evaluated. Cervical-spine injuries were common. For predicting abnormal CT findings, the sensitivity of motor and sensory findings was 69.2% with a specificity of 85.4%. The positive predictive value (PPV) of motor and sensory findings was 96.2%. The negative predictive value (NPV) of motor and sensory findings was 34.0%. On MRI, sensitivity for motor and sensory findings was 85.1% for correctly predicting abnormal MRI findings, while the specificity was 52.8%. The PPV of motor and sensory findings was 82.5% with a NPV of 57.6%.

Conclusion: In this trauma population, correlation of clinical findings with abnormal CT findings was 84.4% and for MRI findings was 72.3%, indicating that clinical findings alone may not be sufficient to rule out the need for imaging; false negatives could lead to missed or incorrect level of injury diagnoses.

Contribution: This study adds to the proof that while clinical findings are reasonably accurate for the determination of neurological spinal cord injury level, both CT and MRI add additional information, making these tests invaluable.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

英科西阿尔伯特卢图利中心医院脊柱创伤患者临床与影像学表现的相关性
背景:脊髓损伤的评估需要全面的神经学检查和放射学评估来确定脊髓损伤的程度。目的:本研究旨在确定是否需要进一步的影像学检查,临床图像是否与影像学结果相关,并比较临床和影像学预测的准确性。方法:回顾性分析英科西阿尔伯特卢图利中心医院6年来脊柱创伤患者的临床表现与影像学表现,并将其进行比较。评估了人口统计学特征、临床与影像学相关性与阳性预测比值的敏感性和特异性。结果:290例脊髓损伤患者接受了CT和/或MRI检查。颈椎损伤很常见。预测异常CT表现,运动和感觉表现的敏感性为69.2%,特异性为85.4%。运动和感觉的阳性预测值为96.2%。运动和感觉的阴性预测值为34.0%。在MRI上,运动和感觉表现对正确预测异常MRI表现的敏感性为85.1%,特异性为52.8%。运动和感觉表现的PPV为82.5%,NPV为57.6%。结论:在该创伤人群中,临床表现与CT异常表现的相关性为84.4%,MRI异常表现的相关性为72.3%,表明仅凭临床表现可能不足以排除影像学检查的必要性;假阴性可能导致错过或不正确的损伤诊断水平。贡献:本研究进一步证明,虽然临床结果对于确定神经脊髓损伤程度是相当准确的,但CT和MRI都提供了额外的信息,使这些测试变得非常宝贵。
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来源期刊
SA Journal of Radiology
SA Journal of Radiology RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING-
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
35
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: The SA Journal of Radiology is the official journal of the Radiological Society of South Africa and the Professional Association of Radiologists in South Africa and Namibia. The SA Journal of Radiology is a general diagnostic radiological journal which carries original research and review articles, pictorial essays, case reports, letters, editorials, radiological practice and other radiological articles.
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