Spinal Motion Restriction
Modernizing Our Management of Injured Patients
A Valley Medical Directors Collaboration
Objectives
• Historical perspective
• Understand injury based on biomechanical principles
• Review current evidence
• Learn spinal motion restriction concept
Historical Perspective
• Clinical Suspicion = IMMOBILIZE
• Any Trauma Above Clavicles = IMMOBILIZE
• Not Sure = IMMOBILIZE
• Fear of Punishment = IMMOBILIZE
• Don’t Feel Like Checking = IMMOBILIZE
Historical Perspective
• How bad is it?
• > 50% of trauma patients with no complaint of back/neck pain get full spinal immobilization
• 13% get immobilized without being asked about pain
The Facts
• 1-5 million EMS patients per year with suspected c-spine injury
• 2% have a fracture
• 1% develop neuro deficits
Why Do We Do It?• To avoid further patient injury caused by us
during movement and transport
• Focus is on stopping gross visible spinal movement
• Patient packaging stops movement
• No movement = spine, cord, and patient are safer, right???
Evidence Is Weak
• Large meta-analysis on spinal immobilization
• “Effect on mortality, neurologic injury, spinal stability… uncertain.”
• “possibility that immobilization may increase mortality and morbidity cannot be excluded”
What Really Matters?• Visible movement is only one threat
• What about…• Pulmonary function compromise• Risk of aspiration/airway compromise• Increased intracranial pressure• Delays in transport• Concealment of other injuries• Soft tissue ischemia/necrosis• Cost of unnecessary diagnostics
Column and Cord
• Movement
• Significant amount of force needed to break bone and tear ligament
• Subsequent movement by EMS is less than force required to cause damage
Column and Cord• Movement
• Normal range of motion = non-destructive distortion
• Movement within normal range requires almost no energy
• Resistance to movement within normal range is essentially zero
• No such thing as “less than zero”
Column and Cord• Movement
• Viscoelastic tissues of spine stiffen and spasm post-injury
• Swelling increases preload on intact ligaments
• Locked facets and bone-on-bone impingements functionally immobilize spine
• Normal patients “self-splint” to avoid pain
Column and Cord
• Post Injury Deterioration
• Tissue hypoxia (local/global)
• Direct contusion
• Biochemical cascade, cell death
Column and Cord
• Post Injury Deterioration
• Mitigated by getting to definitive care FAST
• EMS focus should be reducing delays
• Patient packing with full SI is a potential delay
Summary• We immobilize way too many patients
• Most injured patients will be mechanically stable
• Totally unstable patients probably have maximum damage at time of impact
• All immobilized patients can be potentially harmed
Spinal Immobilization• SI is a method of transport, not a therapy
• SI is a misnomer
• Just say “no” to the standing takedown
• “Spinal Motion Restriction”
• Reducing of gross movement
• Prevention of duplicating damaging mechanism
Just To Be “Safe”
• SI harms patients
• Cannot justify an intervention known to do harm just for small possibility of benefit
• Simple risk/benefit decision
How Does SI Hurt?• Cervical collars
• Proven to increase ICP
• Produce axial distracting force
• Transfer force to ends
• Obscure neck injuries
• Make airway management more difficult
How Does SI Hurt?• Rigid long back boards
• Cause iatrogenic pain
• Cause 15-20% reduction in respiratory capacity
• Causes delays in transport
• Possible risk o pressure ulcers
Backboards
• Still reasonable for…
• Blunt trauma with ALOC
• Spine pain/tenderness and neuro complaint
• Anatomic deformity of spine
• High-energy mechanism with ALOC, distracting injury, inability to communicate
How Does SI Hurt?
• “Time Zero” Myth
• Patient evaluation and treatment does not begin at the exact time of arrival to the ED
Now What?
• Allow EMS to selectively immobilize
• Allow EMS to use the least amount of package needed for safe transport
• Monitor outcomes
Backboards
• Still reasonable for…
• Blunt trauma with ALOC
• Spine pain/tenderness and neuro complaint
• Anatomic deformity of spine
• High-energy mechanism with ALOC, distracting injury, inability to communicate
What About the Equipment?
• Scoop stretchers same or superior than log roll and lift-and-slide techniques
• Kendrick devices, short boards?
• Self-extrication with collar may be better, but ONLY for normal, reliable patients
What About the Equipment?
• “Backboards are like spatulas; at some point that burger has to be put on a bun…”
• Backboards are an extrication tool, not a medical treatment.
Backboards
• Still reasonable for…
• Blunt trauma with ALOC
• Spine pain/tenderness and neuro complaint
• Anatomic deformity of spine
• High-energy mechanism with ALOC, distracting injury, inability to communicate
Copyright © 2012 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. 69
Spinal Immobilization Algorithm: Spinal Immobilization Algorithm: Blunt TraumaBlunt Trauma
Altered level of consciousness (GCS less than 15)
NoYes
IMMOBILIZE
Rapid transport
Spinal pain or tenderness?or
Neurological deficit or complaint?or
Anatomic deformity of spine?
NoYes
IMMOBILIZE
Rapid transport
Concerning mechanism of injury?
(Cont’d)
Copyright © 2012 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. 71
Presence of:Evidence of alcohol/drugs
orDistracting injury
orInability to communicate
Concerning Mechanism of Injury
NoYes
IMMOBILIZATION NOT INDICATED
Rapid transport
Transport
NoYes
IMMOBILIZATION NOT INDICATED
Transport
IMMOBILIZE
Spinal Immobilization Algorithm: Spinal Immobilization Algorithm: Blunt Trauma (Cont’d)Blunt Trauma (Cont’d)
ED Transfer of Care
• Helpful to discuss with ED why you decided to package or not package patient
• Share your information and decision-making
• Patient packaging no longer a contextual clue to guide radiography needs
• ED providers will have to independently re-examine and decide if radiography indicated
Interfacility Transfers• Medical directors need to reconsider protocols
• How is first hospital “clearing?”
• Crews should independently examine patients
• Implications of GCS < 15?
• Collar reasonable, but rigid long board???
• Other ways to “puts handles on a patient”
Thank You!• Valley Medical Directors
• Jim Morrissey, Alameda County EMS
• Jerry Schirmer, Laura McElhatten, Mark Jones, Mesa Fire/Medical EMS Division, Charlie Foster, Amy Gaber
• MFMD 204-A, CFD E286-C and R286-C
• SWA SW208
• SFD E601-A, P608