Neck and Spinal Cord Injury

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Neck and Spinal Cord Injury Alpesh A. Patel MD FACS Associate Professor Chief, Orthopaedic Spine Surgery Co-Director, Northwestern Spine Center Director, Fellowship in Spinal Surgery Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

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Neck and Spinal Cord Injury. Alpesh A. Patel MD FACS Associate Professor Chief, Orthopaedic Spine Surgery Co-Director, Northwestern Spine Center Director, Fellowship in Spinal Surgery Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Disclosures. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Neck and Spinal Cord Injury

Page 1: Neck and Spinal Cord Injury

Neck and Spinal Cord Injury

Alpesh A. Patel MD FACSAssociate Professor

Chief, Orthopaedic Spine SurgeryCo-Director, Northwestern Spine Center

Director, Fellowship in Spinal SurgeryDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

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Disclosures

ConsultingAmedica, Biomet, DePuy, GE Healthcare, Stryker Spine, Zimmer

Product Design/RoyaltiesAmedica, Ulrich Medical

Stock options/Ownership (<1%)Amedica, Trinity, Nocimed, Cytonics

BoardCervical Spine Research Society, Lumbar Spine Research Society, Indo-American Spine Alliance

Editorial BoardContemporary Spine Surgery, Surgical Neurology International

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NMH Spinal Cord Injury Center

• RIC – Midwest Regional Spinal Cord Injury Center

• One of 14 national sites• NIH

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Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury

• Cervical spine most common• 12,000 new cases

per year in U.S• Dramatic Injuries• Young, Fearless Population

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SCI Grouped Etiology

1973-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 2005-09 2010-120%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

14.4% 14.2%10.2%

7.6% 7.0% 8.8% 8.0% 9.2%

Vehicular Accidents Falls Violence Sports

Year

Perc

enta

ge

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Age at Injury and Gender

1973–1979 1980–1984 1985–1989 1990–1994 1995–1999 2000–2004 2005–201220

25

30

35

40

45

Males: 23,442 (80.7%) Females: 5,610 (19.3%)

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203080 million people

20% of US population

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Mortality

• Long-term– 23-66% @

1 year

Fasset JN Spine 2007Harris JBJS 2010

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Falls and SCI

• Fall Risk– Propioceptive dysfunction– Neuropathy– Medications– Medical co-morbidities

• Pre-existing canal stenosis– Spondylotic disease– Asymptomatic

• 25-90% > 60 years old

Boden JBJS 1990Teresi Radiology 1987

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Economic Costs

• >170 days of hospitalization - 1st 2 yrs• Direct costs – 12-14 billion US $ per yr• Indirect costs

– Lost wages– Caregivers– Lost productivity

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What are the challenges facing spinal cord recovery?

The Acutely Injured The Chronically Injured

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Historical Perspective

• Traction• Bedrest• Benign neglect

“One having a crushed vertebrae in his neck; he is unconscious of his two arms (and) his two legs, (and) he is speechless.

- Translation of the Edwin Smith papyrus, 3000 B.C.

an ailment not to be treated.”

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Pathophysiology of Spinal Cord Injury

• Primary mediators:– Direct injury to

spinal cord tissue– Hemorrhage– Ischemia

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IntactCord

Acute Spinal Cord Injury

MechanicalForces

PRIMARYINJURY

Acute Pathophysiologic Processes

+

SECONDARYDAMAGE

PRIMARY DAMAGESECONDARY DAMAGE

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Goals of Treatment

Neurological Preservation

Spinal Stabilization

Neurological Regeneration

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Evaluation• Standardized• Spinal Immobilization• Exam

– Neurological exam– Concomitant injuries

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Current Interventions

• Surgical decompression• Optimizing spinal cord circulation• Steroids

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Neurologic Recovery

LaterNow

When do we operate?

Timing of Surgery

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Past – Timing of Surgery

• No urgency in treatment– “Early treatment” 3-5 days

• Early treatment = risk !– Neurological decline– Cardiopulmonary– Polytrauma

Marshall 1985, Vaccaro 1997, Mirza 1999, McKinley 2004…

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Benefits of Early Surgery

• Neurological protection• Early stabilization• Quicker and safer mobilization• Decreased morbidity

– ICU stay– Pulmonary complications– GI complications

Schlegel, J. Orth. Trauma, 1996

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Animal Data

• Primate– Kobrine et al 1978, 1979

• Feline– Brodkey et al 1972– Croft et al 1972

• Canine– Bohlman et al 1979– Delamarter et al 1995– Carlson et al1997, 2003

• Rats– Guha et al 1987– Zhang et al 1993– Dimar et al 1999

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Human ModelsWe operated right awayand by the next morning

she was moving her legs!

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The plural of anecdote is not evidence

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• Multicenter, Non-randomized• 2002 to 2009• Acute Cervical SCI – 313 patients

– 182 Early (<24 hours): mean 14.2 hr– 131 Late (>24 hours): mean 48.3 hr

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STASCIS

• SAFETY : Equivalent• RECOVERY (p<0.05)

1 GradeImprovement

2 GradeImprovement

*

**

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LaterNow ?SCIEvidence

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Current Interventions

• Surgical decompression• Optimizing spinal cord perfusion• Steroids• Hypothermia

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Spinal Cord Circulation

Tator CH. Review of experimental spinal cord injury with emphasis on the local and systemic circulatory effects. Neurochirurgie 1991; 37:291-301. Tator CH, Fehlings MG. Review of the secondary injury theory of acute spinal cord trauma with emphasis on vascular mechanisms. J Neurosurg 1991; 75:15-26.

• Decline in Blood Flow After Trauma– Autoregulation disrupted by

trauma– Systemic hypotension

• Post-Traumatic Ischemia and Infarction– Microcirculatory changes– Blood flow drops to < 20

cc/100g/min within 2 hrs– Vascular congestion & vasogenic

edema– Neurogenic shock

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Spinal Cord Perfusion

• PRESERVE cord perfusion• PRESERVE neuro function• AVOID

– Hypotension– Anemia

• No strong published guidelines

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Spinal Cord Perfusion

• Mean arterial pressure >80– Optimize Volume (CVP)– Pressure support

• Hematocrit >30• Duration

– 3-7 days– ICU care

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Steroids – Wonder Drug?

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NASCIS II and III High Dose Methylprednisolone

IV bolus: 30 mg/kg Continuous infusion: 5.4 mg/kg/hr

If steroids given: Duration0-3 hrs post injury 24 hrs3-8 hrs post injury 48 hrs

Bracken, et al. JAMA 1997Bracken, et al. N Engl J Med 1990

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NASCIS Limitations

• Methodology– Post hoc analysis– Arbitrary time cut-offs

• Transparency– Private data

• Objectivity– Drug sponsored studies– COMPLICATIONS

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High Dose Steroids

• AVOID steroids in:– Neurologically intact– Nerve root injuries– Patients > 3-8 hours from injury– Gun shot wounds– Penetrating trauma– Elderly– Multiply injured– Dose >24 hours

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Why do we use steroids?

• Therapeutic Benefit – 17%• Litigation – 70 %

Hurlbert et al 2002 and 2009

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Neuroprotectives and Regenerative Strategies

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Future Studies• Drug interventions

– TWO at Northwestern• Multi-center trials• IV treatments in patients with Cervical/Thoracic Acute

Spinal Cord Injury

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Future Studies• Early detection

– Advance MRI studies: find patients at risk BEFORE they are injured

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Right Now:

• Early Diagnosis and Comprehensive Treatment

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Thank You