The case for early treatment of dislocations of the cervical spine with cord involvement sustained playing rugby

Author:

Newton D.1,England M.2,Doll H.3,Gardner B. P.1

Affiliation:

1. National Spinal Injuries Centre, Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire HP21 8AL, UK.

2. RFU Injured Players Foundation, Rugby House, 200 Whitton Road, Twickenham TW2 7BA, UK.

3. Department of Public Health, University of Oxford, Old Road Campus, Headington, Oxford OX3 7LF, UK.

Abstract

The most common injury in rugby resulting in spinal cord injury (SCI) is cervical facet dislocation. We report on the outcome of a series of 57 patients with acute SCI and facet dislocation sustained when playing rugby and treated by reduction between 1988 and 2000 in Conradie Hospital, Cape Town. A total of 32 patients were completely paralysed at the time of reduction. Of these 32, eight were reduced within four hours of injury and five of them made a full recovery. Of the remaining 24 who were reduced after four hours of injury, none made a full recovery and only one made a partial recovery that was useful. Our results suggest that low-velocity trauma causing SCI, such as might occur in a rugby accident, presents an opportunity for secondary prevention of permanent SCI. In these cases the permanent damage appears to result from secondary injury, rather than primary mechanical spinal cord damage. In common with other central nervous system injuries where ischaemia determines the outcome, the time from injury to reduction, and hence reperfusion, is probably important. In order to prevent permanent neurological damage after rugby injuries, cervical facet dislocations should probably be reduced within four hours of injury.

Publisher

British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

Reference18 articles.

1. Go BK, DeVivo JM, Scott Richards J. The epidemiology of spinal cord injury. In: Stover SL, DeLisa JA, Whiteneck GG, eds. Spinal cord injury: clinical outcomes from the model systems. Gaithersburg: Aspen Publishers, 1995:35-40.

2. Effect of nationwide injury prevention programme on serious spinal injuries in New Zealand rugby union: ecological study

3. Rugby and cervical spine injuries – has anything changed? A 5-year review in the Western Cape

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