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Taylor & Francis (Routledge), The Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine, 5(38), p. 607-614

DOI: 10.1179/2045772314y.0000000254

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Airway complications in traumatic lower cervical spinal cord injury: A retrospective study

Journal article published in 2014 by Thomas Liebscher ORCID, Andreas Niedeggen, Barbara Estel, Rainer O. Seidl
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Objective To investigate risk factors for pneumonia in patients with traumatic lower cervical spinal cord injury. Design Observational study, retrospective study. Setting Spinal cord unit in a maximum care hospital. Methods Thirty-seven patients with acute isolated traumatic spinal cord injury at levels C4-C8 and complete motor function injury (AIS A, B) treated from 2004 to 2010 met the criteria for inclusion in our retrospective analysis. The following parameters were considered: ventilation-specific parameters, re-intubation, creation of a tracheostomy, pneumonia, antibiotic treatment, and length of intensive care unit (ICU) stay and total hospitalization. Results Among the patients, 81% had primary invasive ventilation. In 78% of cases a tracheostomy was created; 3% of these cases were discharged with invasive ventilation and 28% with a tracheostomy without ventilation. Pneumonia according to Centers for Disease Control criteria occurred in 51% of cases within 21 ± 32 days of injury, and in 3% at a later date. The number of pre-existing conditions was significantly associated with pneumonia. Length of ICU stay was 25 ± 34 days, and average total hospital duration was 230 ± 144 days. Significant factors affecting the duration of ventilation were the number of pre-existing conditions and tetraplegia-specific complications. Conclusions Our results confirm that patients with traumatic lower cervical spinal cord injuries defined by lesion level and AIS constitute a homogeneous group. This group is characterized by a high rate of pneumonia during the first 4 weeks after injury. The number of pre-existing general conditions and spinal injury-specific comorbidities are the only risk factors identified for the development of pneumonia and/or duration of ventilation.