脊柱屈曲牵张损伤:儿童和青少年的偶发骨折和后韧带等效损伤

Tyler Calkin, Emily P. Ernest, J. Lubicky
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摘要

屈曲-牵张损伤(FDI)是一种罕见且严重的损伤。虽然最初描述为胸腰椎的骨损伤,但这些损伤可以是纯骨性的,纯韧带/软组织的或所有脊柱水平的组合。由于涉及的力量,相关的非脊柱损伤可能发生。回顾性分析了10年间0-18岁脊柱损伤患者的数据,并将患者分为两组,FDI和非FDI脊柱骨折。在本研究中,颈椎和胸椎FDI、Chance骨折和后韧带等效骨折均被视为FDI,发生在22/301脊柱损伤患者中。所有脊髓损伤患者中发病率最高的是10岁以下年龄组(31.6%;p = 0.004)。机动车碰撞是最常见的伤害机制。与非FDI患者相比,FDI患者的统计学显著差异分别为:平均年龄(13.7岁对15.6岁)、住院时间(10.2天对4.0天)、随访时间(1.7年对0.5年)、脊柱手术(78.3%对15.5%)、腹内器官损伤(26%对11%)、首发时(43%对10.4%)和最终随访时(22%对4%)的神经功能缺损。5例无神经功能缺损患者未行手术。72%(13/18)接受手术的FDI患者需要使用器械。损伤程度与FDI发生率或神经功能缺损之间无关联。FDI最常见于年龄较小的儿童,其相关损伤的可能性很高,包括腹内和神经损伤。FDI患者通常需要手术治疗,住院时间延长,需要长期随访。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Spinal Flexion Distraction Injuries: Chance Fractures and Posterior Ligamentous Equivalents in Children and Adolescents
Flexion-distraction injuries (FDI) are uncommon and often serious due to the mechanism of injury. Although originally described as a bony lesion in the thoracolumbar spine, these injuries can be purely bony, purely ligamentous/soft tissue or a combination at all spinal levels. Because of the forces involved, associated non-spine injuries can occur. Data on patients age 0-18 years with spinal injuries over a ten-year period were retrospectively reviewed and patients were classified into two groups, those with FDI and those with a spinal fracture other than FDI. Cervical and thoracic FDI, Chance fractures and posterior ligamentous equivalents, all considered FDI in this study, occurred in 22/301 spinal injured patients. The highest incidence considering all spinal injured patients was in the under 10 years old group (31.6%; p=0.004). A motor vehicle collision was the most common mechanism of injury. Statistically significant differences between patients with FDI compared to those without were respectively: average age (13.7 vs. 15.6 years), length of stay (10.2 days vs. 4.0 days), follow-up (1.7 years vs. 0.5 years), spinal surgery (78.3% vs. 15.5%), intra-abdominal organ injury (26% vs. 11%) and neurological deficit at presentation (43% vs. 10.4%) and at final follow-up (22% vs. 4%). Five patients without neurologic deficit did not undergo surgery.Seventy-two percent (13/18) of FDI patients having surgery required instrumentation. There was no association between injury level and FDI incidence or neurological deficit. FDI are most common in younger children with high likelihood of associated injuries, including intra-abdominal and neurological. FDI patients most often require surgical treatment, have an increased length of hospital stay and require longer-term follow-up.
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