PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 2 August 2001, p. e20
Received Nov 20, 2000; accepted Mar 26, 2001.
,
,
From the * Department of Emergency Medicine, SUNY Stony Brook
University Hospital, Stony Brook, New York; Objective. Pediatric victims of blunt
trauma have developmental and anatomic characteristics that can make it
difficult to assess their risk of cervical spine injury (CSI). Previous
reports, all retrospective in nature, have not identified any cases of
CSI in either children or adults in the absence of neck pain,
neurologic symptoms, distracting injury, or altered mental status. The
objective of this study was to examine the incidence and spectrum of
spine injury in patients who are younger than 18 years and to evaluate
the efficacy of the National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study
(NEXUS) decision instrument for obtaining cervical spine radiography in pediatric trauma victims.
Methods. We performed a prospective, multicenter study to
evaluate pediatric blunt trauma victims. All patients who presented to
participating emergency departments underwent clinical evaluation
before radiographic imaging. The presence or absence of the following
criteria was noted: midline cervical tenderness, altered level of
alertness, evidence of intoxication, neurologic abnormality, and
presence of painful distracting injury. Presence or absence of each
individual criterion was documented for each patient before
radiographic imaging, unless the patient was judged to be too unstable
to complete the clinical evaluation before radiographs. The decision to
radiograph a patient was entirely at the physician's discretion and
not driven by the NEXUS questionnaire. The presence or absence of CSI
was based on the final interpretation of all radiographic studies. Data
on all patients who were younger than 18 years were sequestered from
the main database for separate analysis.
Results. There were 3065 patients (9.0% of all NEXUS
patients) who were younger than 18 years in this cohort, 30 of whom
(0.98%) sustained a CSI. Included in the study were 88 children who
were younger than 2, 817 who were between 2 and 8, and 2160 who were 8 to 17. Fractures of the lower cervical vertebrae (C5-C7) accounted for 45.9% of pediatric CSIs. No case of spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality was reported in any child in this study, although 22 cases were reported in adults. Only 4 of the 30 injured children were younger than 9 years, and none was younger than 2 years.
Tenderness and distracting injury were the 2 most common abnormalities
noted in patients with and without CSI. The decision rule correctly
identified all pediatric CSI victims (sensitivity: 100.0%; 95%
confidence interval: 87.8%-100.0%) and correctly designated 603 patients as low risk for CSI (negative predictive value: 100.0%; 95%
confidence interval: 99.4%-100.0%).
Conclusions. The lower cervical spine is the most common
site of CSI in children, and fractures are the most common type of
injury. CSI is rare among patients aged 8 years or younger. The NEXUS
decision instrument performed well in children, and its use could
reduce pediatric cervical spine imaging by nearly 20%. However, the
small number of infants and toddlers in the study suggests
caution in applying the NEXUS criteria to this particular age
group.
Department of
Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine, Emory University School of
Medicine, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, Georgia;
§ Department of Radiology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles,
California;
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of
Rochester, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York; and
¶ UCLA Emergency Medicine Center, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles,
California.
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