Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report

Cervical spine injuries are often described as catastrophic events in neurological terms, with very low survival rate. Lesions to C3-C7 segment are the most common (about 80%) followed by segment C1-C2 (20%). The cervical spine injuries are of great importance, both by severity as the neurological implications. It is important to consider that among cervical traumas that do not present neurological damage at the time of the accident, 10% have deficits later, so all cervical trauma should be considered as potential spinal cord traumas, until the evolution of the case shows that definitively there is no spinal cord or nerve root damage. Cases have been reported with both atlantooccipital and atlantoaxial dislocations without neurological deficit, so these lesions went unnoticed in the emergency services. Some of the events to be considered at the time of the accident are suboccipital pain on axial skull pressure and spontaneous stiffness of the patient's neck. Dysphagia, pain on palpation of the anterior neck and a visible increase of prepharyngeal mass can also be observed, which is why it is important to keep the suspicion of craniocervical trauma in all patients who have these symptoms and carry out the relevant tests. This paper presents a case of post-traumatic atlantoaxial dislocation, which showed no neurological deficit at the time of the accident, but was later presented, as well as the surgical procedure carried out.

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Main Authors: Lemus,Mario Cahueque, Uribe,Enrique Vargas, Avila,José María Jiménez
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Coluna 2015
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1808-18512015000100053
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spelling oai:scielo:S1808-185120150001000532015-08-03Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case reportLemus,Mario CahuequeUribe,Enrique VargasAvila,José María Jiménez Atlantoaxial joint Joint instability Dislocation Cervical spine injuries are often described as catastrophic events in neurological terms, with very low survival rate. Lesions to C3-C7 segment are the most common (about 80%) followed by segment C1-C2 (20%). The cervical spine injuries are of great importance, both by severity as the neurological implications. It is important to consider that among cervical traumas that do not present neurological damage at the time of the accident, 10% have deficits later, so all cervical trauma should be considered as potential spinal cord traumas, until the evolution of the case shows that definitively there is no spinal cord or nerve root damage. Cases have been reported with both atlantooccipital and atlantoaxial dislocations without neurological deficit, so these lesions went unnoticed in the emergency services. Some of the events to be considered at the time of the accident are suboccipital pain on axial skull pressure and spontaneous stiffness of the patient's neck. Dysphagia, pain on palpation of the anterior neck and a visible increase of prepharyngeal mass can also be observed, which is why it is important to keep the suspicion of craniocervical trauma in all patients who have these symptoms and carry out the relevant tests. This paper presents a case of post-traumatic atlantoaxial dislocation, which showed no neurological deficit at the time of the accident, but was later presented, as well as the surgical procedure carried out.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Brasileira de ColunaColuna/Columna v.14 n.1 20152015-03-01info:eu-repo/semantics/reporttext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1808-18512015000100053en10.1590/S1808-1851201514010R129
institution SCIELO
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Lemus,Mario Cahueque
Uribe,Enrique Vargas
Avila,José María Jiménez
spellingShingle Lemus,Mario Cahueque
Uribe,Enrique Vargas
Avila,José María Jiménez
Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
author_facet Lemus,Mario Cahueque
Uribe,Enrique Vargas
Avila,José María Jiménez
author_sort Lemus,Mario Cahueque
title Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
title_short Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
title_full Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
title_fullStr Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
title_sort traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation, posterior transfacet fixation: a case report
description Cervical spine injuries are often described as catastrophic events in neurological terms, with very low survival rate. Lesions to C3-C7 segment are the most common (about 80%) followed by segment C1-C2 (20%). The cervical spine injuries are of great importance, both by severity as the neurological implications. It is important to consider that among cervical traumas that do not present neurological damage at the time of the accident, 10% have deficits later, so all cervical trauma should be considered as potential spinal cord traumas, until the evolution of the case shows that definitively there is no spinal cord or nerve root damage. Cases have been reported with both atlantooccipital and atlantoaxial dislocations without neurological deficit, so these lesions went unnoticed in the emergency services. Some of the events to be considered at the time of the accident are suboccipital pain on axial skull pressure and spontaneous stiffness of the patient's neck. Dysphagia, pain on palpation of the anterior neck and a visible increase of prepharyngeal mass can also be observed, which is why it is important to keep the suspicion of craniocervical trauma in all patients who have these symptoms and carry out the relevant tests. This paper presents a case of post-traumatic atlantoaxial dislocation, which showed no neurological deficit at the time of the accident, but was later presented, as well as the surgical procedure carried out.
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Coluna
publishDate 2015
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1808-18512015000100053
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AT avilajosemariajimenez traumaticatlantoaxialsubluxationposteriortransfacetfixationacasereport
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