Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma

Background: In paediatric trauma, measured increase in prevertebral soft tissue thickness on a lateral cervical spine (C-spine) X-ray is interpreted as swelling, raising suspicion of C-spine injury1,2 . Defining swelling in absolute measurements is cumbersome – children’s sizes vary. Evidence for po...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McCaul, Jeannie Katharine
Other Authors: Dix-Peek, Stewart
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Surgery 2020
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867614509455114240
access_status_str Open Access
author McCaul, Jeannie Katharine
author2 Dix-Peek, Stewart
author_browse Dix-Peek, Stewart
McCaul, Jeannie Katharine
author_facet Dix-Peek, Stewart
McCaul, Jeannie Katharine
author_sort McCaul, Jeannie Katharine
collection Thesis
description Background: In paediatric trauma, measured increase in prevertebral soft tissue thickness on a lateral cervical spine (C-spine) X-ray is interpreted as swelling, raising suspicion of C-spine injury1,2 . Defining swelling in absolute measurements is cumbersome – children’s sizes vary. Evidence for potentially more consistent tools measuring soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width is lacking. Clinical decision rules should be based on best available evidence to minimize patient harms and improve health outcomes. This study determined whether consistent, measurable ratios exist for use as simple diagnostic tools in assessing paediatric soft tissue swelling and C-spine injury. Methods: A pragmatic quantitative retrospective cross-sectional study randomly sampled C-spine trauma X-rays taken at a South African children’s hospital. Seventy-one un-intubated X-rays from 85 controls were used to identify normal ratios. The authors measured vertebral bodies and soft tissue at each level, created all possible ratios, then chose the two least variable – one for the upper and one for the lower C-spine. Twenty cases aided in determining diagnostic accuracy for C-spine injury. Results: Mean soft tissue at the second cervical vertebral level (c2) was 38% of the seventh vertebra (C7) (95%CI:34-41.9%, SE:2.0%, variance:2.5%). Mean c6 soft tissue was 65.6% of C7 vertebra (95%CI:61.9-69.3%, SE:1.9%, variance:2.3%). In diagnosing C-spine injury, a Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve calculation gave an empirical optimal cut-point of 53.9% and 74.4% respectively. Using practical cut-offs of 55% at c2 and 75% at c6 yield specificities of 93.8% (95%CI:84.8-98.3%) and 81.8% (95%CI:70.4-90.2%), with negative predictive values of 90.9% (95%CI:81.3-96.6%) and 91.5% (95%CI:81.3-97.2%) respectively. Conclusions: Consistent and specific ratios exist in the upper and lower paediatric C-spine. Both ratios have extremely poor sensitivities and positive predictive values and so are poor screening tools, but can aid in ruling in injury in patients with clinical suspicion. Level of evidence: Diagnostic Level III
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30795
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:53:10.615Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Surgery
publisherStr Department of Surgery
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30795 CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma McCaul, Jeannie Katharine Dix-Peek, Stewart Background: In paediatric trauma, measured increase in prevertebral soft tissue thickness on a lateral cervical spine (C-spine) X-ray is interpreted as swelling, raising suspicion of C-spine injury1,2 . Defining swelling in absolute measurements is cumbersome – children’s sizes vary. Evidence for potentially more consistent tools measuring soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width is lacking. Clinical decision rules should be based on best available evidence to minimize patient harms and improve health outcomes. This study determined whether consistent, measurable ratios exist for use as simple diagnostic tools in assessing paediatric soft tissue swelling and C-spine injury. Methods: A pragmatic quantitative retrospective cross-sectional study randomly sampled C-spine trauma X-rays taken at a South African children’s hospital. Seventy-one un-intubated X-rays from 85 controls were used to identify normal ratios. The authors measured vertebral bodies and soft tissue at each level, created all possible ratios, then chose the two least variable – one for the upper and one for the lower C-spine. Twenty cases aided in determining diagnostic accuracy for C-spine injury. Results: Mean soft tissue at the second cervical vertebral level (c2) was 38% of the seventh vertebra (C7) (95%CI:34-41.9%, SE:2.0%, variance:2.5%). Mean c6 soft tissue was 65.6% of C7 vertebra (95%CI:61.9-69.3%, SE:1.9%, variance:2.3%). In diagnosing C-spine injury, a Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve calculation gave an empirical optimal cut-point of 53.9% and 74.4% respectively. Using practical cut-offs of 55% at c2 and 75% at c6 yield specificities of 93.8% (95%CI:84.8-98.3%) and 81.8% (95%CI:70.4-90.2%), with negative predictive values of 90.9% (95%CI:81.3-96.6%) and 91.5% (95%CI:81.3-97.2%) respectively. Conclusions: Consistent and specific ratios exist in the upper and lower paediatric C-spine. Both ratios have extremely poor sensitivities and positive predictive values and so are poor screening tools, but can aid in ruling in injury in patients with clinical suspicion. Level of evidence: Diagnostic Level III 2020-01-23T12:49:44Z 2020-01-23T12:49:44Z 2019 2020-01-22T08:57:46Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30795 eng application/pdf Department of Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle McCaul, Jeannie Katharine
CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
thesis_degree_str Master's
title CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
title_full CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
title_fullStr CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
title_full_unstemmed CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
title_short CSPINE (Correlating Soft tissue Projections in Injured NEcks) A descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
title_sort cspine correlating soft tissue projections in injured necks a descriptive study on measuring prevertebral soft tissue thickness as a ratio of vertebral body width in paediatric cervical spine trauma
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30795
work_keys_str_mv AT mccauljeanniekatharine cspinecorrelatingsofttissueprojectionsininjurednecksadescriptivestudyonmeasuringprevertebralsofttissuethicknessasaratioofvertebralbodywidthinpaediatriccervicalspinetrauma