Isolated traumatic occipital condyle fractures: Is external cervical orthosis even necessary?

Occipital condyle fractures (OCFs) have been reported in up to 4-16% of individuals suffering cervical spine trauma. The current management of OCF fractures relies on a rigid cervical collar for 6 weeks or longer. Here, we calculated the rate of acute and delayed surgical intervention (occipitocervi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Surgical neurology international 2021, Vol.12, p.524, Article 524
Hauptverfasser: Nwachuku, Enyinna, Njoku-Austin, Confidence, Patel, Kevin P, Anthony, Austin W, Mittal, Aditya, Hamilton, David Kojo, Kanter, Adam, Gerszten, Peter C, Okonkwo, David
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container_start_page 524
container_title Surgical neurology international
container_volume 12
creator Nwachuku, Enyinna
Njoku-Austin, Confidence
Patel, Kevin P
Anthony, Austin W
Mittal, Aditya
Hamilton, David Kojo
Kanter, Adam
Gerszten, Peter C
Okonkwo, David
description Occipital condyle fractures (OCFs) have been reported in up to 4-16% of individuals suffering cervical spine trauma. The current management of OCF fractures relies on a rigid cervical collar for 6 weeks or longer. Here, we calculated the rate of acute and delayed surgical intervention (occipitocervical fusion) for patients with isolated OCF who were managed with a cervical collar over a 10-year period at a single institution. This was a retrospective analysis performed on all patients admitted to a Level 1 Trauma Center between 2008 and 2018 who suffered traumatic isolated OCF managed with an external rigid cervical orthosis. Radiographic imaging was reviewed by several board-certified neuroradiologists. Demographic and clinical data were collected including need for occipitocervical fusion within 12 months after trauma. The incidence of isolated OCF was 4% (60/1536) for those patients admitted with cervical spine fractures. They averaged 49 years of age, and 58% were male falls accounted for the mechanism of injury in 47% of patients. Classification of OCF was most commonly classified in 47% as type I Anderson and Montesano fractures. Of the 60 patients who suffered isolated OCF that was managed with external cervical orthosis, 0% required occipitocervical fusion within 12 months posttrauma. About 90% were discharged, while the remaining 10% sustained traumatic brain/orthopedic injury that limited an accurate neurological assessment. Here, we documented a 4% incidence of isolated OCF in our cervical trauma population, a rate which is comparable to that found in the literature year. Most notably, we documented a 0% incidence for requiring delayed occipital-cervical fusions.
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title Isolated traumatic occipital condyle fractures: Is external cervical orthosis even necessary?
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