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Optimal positioning for cervical immobilization

R A De Lorenzo1, J E Olson, M Boska

  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio, USA.

Annals of Emergency Medicine
|September 1, 1996
PubMed
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Optimal cervical spine immobilization in healthy adults involves a slight head and neck flexion. Elevating the occiput by 2 cm improves spinal canal/cord ratio, crucial for preventing injuries.

Area of Science:

  • Orthopedic Surgery
  • Neurosurgery
  • Emergency Medicine

Background:

  • Cervical spine immobilization is critical in trauma care.
  • Optimal head and neck positioning for spinal cord protection remains debated.
  • External landmarks for reproducible positioning are needed.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Determine optimal cervical spine immobilization using MRI.
  • Define a clinically reproducible position for immobilization.

Main Methods:

  • 19 healthy adult volunteers underwent quantitative MRI.
  • Head and neck positioned to achieve varying degrees of flexion and extension.
  • Cervical spine imaging analyzed for spinal canal and cord dimensions.

Main Results:

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  • Spinal canal/cord area ratio was smallest at C6, exceeding 2.0 from C2-T1.
  • Maximal ratio at C5-C6 achieved with slight flexion (14-degree cervical-thoracic angle).
  • This corresponds to a 2 cm occiput elevation on a backboard.

Conclusions:

  • Slight neck flexion (2 cm occiput elevation) optimizes spinal canal/cord ratio at C5-C6.
  • This position enhances spinal cord protection in a vulnerable injury region.
  • Findings provide a reproducible method for cervical spine immobilization.