4.4 Article

Timing of Spinal Surgery in Polytrauma: The Relevance of Injury Severity, Injury Level and Associated Injuries

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GLOBAL SPINE JOURNAL
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/21925682231216082

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spine injury; concomitant injuries; timing of surgery; trauma registry

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This retrospective database analysis aimed to evaluate the impact of spinal injury localization, severity, and concurrent injury patterns on the timing of surgery and subsequent outcome in polytraumatized patients. The results showed that polytrauma patients frequently sustain multiple spinal injuries, and the severity of concomitant injuries and spinal injury localization play a role in the timing of surgical intervention and the outcome.
Study Design: Retrospective database analysis. Objective: Polytraumatized patients with spinal injuries require tailor-made treatment plans. Severity of both spinal and concomitant injuries determine timing of spinal surgery. Aim of this study was to evaluate the role of spinal injury localization, severity and concurrent injury patterns on timing of surgery and subsequent outcome. Methods: The TraumaRegister DGU (R) was utilized and patients, aged >= 16 years, with an Injury Severity Score (ISS) >= 16 and diagnosed with relevant spinal injuries (abbreviated injury scale, AIS >= 3) were selected. Concurrent spinal and non-spinal injuries were analysed and the relation between injury severity, concurrent injury patterns and timing of spinal surgery was determined. Results: 12.596 patients with a mean age of 50.8 years were included. 7.2% of patients had relevant multisegmental spinal injuries. Furthermore, 50% of patients with spine injuries AIS >= 3 had a more severe non-spinal injury to another body part. ICU and hospital stay were superior in patients treated within 48 hrs for lumbar and thoracic spinal injuries. In cervical injuries early intervention (<48 hrs) was associated with increased mortality rates (9.7 vs 6.3%). Conclusions: The current multicentre study demonstrates that polytrauma patients frequently sustain multiple spinal injuries, and those with an index spine injury may therefore benefit from standardized whole-spine imaging. Moreover, timing of surgical spinal surgery and outcome appear to depend on the severity of concomitant injuries and spinal injury localization. Future prospective studies are needed to identify trauma characteristics that are associated with improved outcome upon early or late spinal surgery.

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