首页|Beach Breaking Waves and Related Cervical Spine Injuries: A Level One Trauma Center Experience and Systematic Review

Beach Breaking Waves and Related Cervical Spine Injuries: A Level One Trauma Center Experience and Systematic Review

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? 2022 Elsevier Inc.Objective: To analyze cervical spine injuries resulting from recreational activity in shallow ocean water amid high-energy breaking waves. Methods: Single-center 10-year review of patients who sustained cervical injuries at the beach in Long Island, New York, USA. A systematic review following the PRISMA guidelines was also performed. Results: Nineteen patients (age 17–79 years) sustained cervical injury from high-energy breaking waves while in shallow beach water. Six patients dived into a wave; 6 patients were struck by a large wave while standing upright; and 7 tumbled in the waves while engaged in nonspecified recreational activity. All 7 patients with subaxial cervical AO Spine Injury Score (AO-SIS) >10 had cervical spine injury with cord signal change and required operative management. Diving mechanism, AO-SIS >10, and cord signal change all predicted significant disability or death at 12 months (P < 0.01). The present study and 7 additional studies reporting on 534 patients (mean age, 45.4 years) were analyzed. Within the reported literature, most patients (94.2%) sustained a spinal cord injury. On long-term follow-up, an estimated 64.8% of patients had permanent neurologic injury and 12.5% had permanent quadriplegia. Conclusions: We offer the first description of cervical injuries sustained in water-related recreational activity using the AO-SIS. The morphology of injuries varied significantly and seemed to depend on body position and wave kinetic energy. Patients presenting with cervical injury in this setting and yielding AO-SIS >10 are likely to have poor functional recovery.

Beach wave injuryCervical spineDiving injuryShallow waterSpinal cord injuryTraumatic fracture

Griepp D.W.、De la Garza Ramos R.、Lee J.、Miller A.、Prasad M.、Gelfand Y.、Cardozo-Stolberg S.、Murthy S.G.

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Division of Neurological Surgery Nassau University Medical Center

Department of Neurological Surgery Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Department of Surgery Nassau University Medical Center

2022

World neurosurgery

World neurosurgery

SCI
ISSN:1878-8750
年,卷(期):2022.160
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