Cervical fractures and dislocations: Difference between revisions
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==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
== Calculators == | |||
{{NEXUS_Calculator}} | |||
{{Canadian_CSpine_Calculator}} | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
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<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Trauma]] | [[Category:Trauma]] | ||
[[Category:Neurology]] | [[Category:Neurology]] | ||
[[Category:Orthopedics]] | [[Category:Orthopedics]] | ||
Latest revision as of 15:06, 21 March 2026
This page is for adult patients. For pediatric patients, see: cervical injury (peds)
Background
Vertebral fractures and dislocations types
- Cervical fractures and dislocations
- Thoracic and lumbar fractures and dislocations
Clinical Features
C-spine injuries may present with
- Rarely neurogenic shock (bradycardia, hypotension)
- Posterior neck pain
- Pain on palpation of spinous processes
- Limited neck ROM with pain
- Weakness, numbness, or paresthesias
Differential Diagnosis
Neck Trauma
- Penetrating neck trauma
- Blunt neck trauma
- Cervical injury
- Neurogenic shock
- Spinal cord injury
Neck pain
- Musculoskeletal
- Torticollis
- Dystonic reaction
- Cervical spondylosis
- Cervical stenosis
- Cancer
- Epidural abscess
- Vertebral osteomyelitis
- Transverse myelitis
- Temporal arteritis
- Epidural hematoma (anticoagulation, hemophilia)
- Cervical disk herniation
- Blunt neck trauma
- Anterior horn disease
- Cervical fractures and dislocations
- Cervical radiculopathy
Evaluation
- See blunt neck trauma for general workup
Management
- Prehospital
- Hospital
- See page for specific fracture
- Cervical spine clearance
Disposition
Calculators
NEXUS Criteria
| Criteria (ALL must be absent to clear) | Absent | Present |
|---|---|---|
| Posterior midline cervical tenderness | 1 | |
| Focal neurologic deficit | 1 | |
| Altered level of alertness | 1 | |
| Intoxication | 1 | |
| Distracting painful injury | 1 | |
| Criteria Present | / 5 | |
| Interpretation | |
|---|---|
| 0 | C-spine can be cleared clinically — All 5 criteria absent. No imaging needed. Sensitivity 99.6% for clinically significant injury. |
| ≥1 | Cannot clear clinically — C-spine imaging indicated. |
| References |
|---|
|
Canadian C-Spine Rule
| Step 1: Any High-Risk Factor? (mandates radiography) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Criteria | No | Yes |
| Age ≥65 | 1 | |
| Dangerous mechanism (fall ≥1m/5 stairs, axial load to head, MVC >100km/h or rollover/ejection, motorized recreational vehicle, bicycle collision) | 1 | |
| Paresthesias in extremities | 1 | |
| Step 2: Any Low-Risk Factor? (allows safe ROM assessment) | ||
| Simple rear-end MVC (excludes: pushed into traffic, hit by bus/large truck, rollover, hit by high-speed vehicle) | 1 | |
| Sitting position in ED | 1 | |
| Ambulatory at any time since injury | 1 | |
| Delayed onset of neck pain (not immediate) | 1 | |
| Absence of midline cervical tenderness | 1 | |
| Step 3: Able to actively rotate neck 45° left and right? | ||
| Can rotate neck 45° L and R | 1 | |
| High Risk Factors | / 3 | |
| Low Risk Factors | / 5 | |
| Interpretation (stepwise) | |
|---|---|
| High risk ≥1 | Radiography indicated — Do NOT assess ROM. Image the c-spine. |
| Low risk = 0 | Cannot assess ROM safely — No low-risk factor present to allow safe assessment. Image. |
| Low risk ≥1 + ROM OK | C-spine can be cleared — At least one low-risk factor AND able to rotate neck 45°. No imaging needed. |
| Low risk ≥1 + no ROM | Radiography indicated — Low-risk factor present but unable to rotate. Image. |
| References |
|---|
|
See Also
- Blunt neck trauma
- Cervical spine clearance
- C-Spine (EAST)
- Penetrating neck trauma
- Spinal Cord Trauma
- Spinal Cord Compression (Non-Traumatic)
- Neurogenic Shock
- Unstable spine fractures
- Vertebral fractures
- Cervical injury (peds)

