A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia

Prehospital spinal immobilization is a widely used procedure in the emergency medical service (EMS) system worldwide, while the incidence of patients with spinal injury (SI) is relatively low, and unnecessary prehospital spinal immobilization is associated with patient complications. This study aime...

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Published in:Scientific Reports
Main Author: Chen H.A.; Hsu S.T.; Shin S.D.; Jamaluddin S.F.; Son D.N.; Hong K.J.; Tanaka H.; Sun J.T.; Chiang W.C.; Ramakrishnan; Jamaluddin; Tanaka; Velasco; Hong; Sun; Khruekarnchana; LLC; Son; Rao; Abraham; Mohidin; Saim; Kean; Anthonysamy; Yssof; Ji; Kheng; Ali; Ramanathan; Yang; Chia; Hamad; Ismail; Abdullah; Kimura; Gundran; Convocar; Sabarre; Tiglao; Hong; Song; Jeong; Moon; Kim; Cha; Lee; Ahn; Lee; Yeom; Ryu; Kim; Kim; Hu; Wang; Hsieh; Kao; Riyapan; Tianwibool; Buaprasert; Akaraborworn; Al Sakaf; Huy; Van Dai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Research 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125690366&doi=10.1038%2fs41598-022-07481-0&partnerID=40&md5=dea0d1523af334d111320105bacb176c
id 2-s2.0-85125690366
spelling 2-s2.0-85125690366
Chen H.A.; Hsu S.T.; Shin S.D.; Jamaluddin S.F.; Son D.N.; Hong K.J.; Tanaka H.; Sun J.T.; Chiang W.C.; Ramakrishnan; Jamaluddin; Tanaka; Velasco; Hong; Sun; Khruekarnchana; LLC; Son; Rao; Abraham; Mohidin; Saim; Kean; Anthonysamy; Yssof; Ji; Kheng; Ali; Ramanathan; Yang; Chia; Hamad; Ismail; Abdullah; Kimura; Gundran; Convocar; Sabarre; Tiglao; Hong; Song; Jeong; Moon; Kim; Cha; Lee; Ahn; Lee; Yeom; Ryu; Kim; Kim; Hu; Wang; Hsieh; Kao; Riyapan; Tianwibool; Buaprasert; Akaraborworn; Al Sakaf; Huy; Van Dai
A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
2022
Scientific Reports
12
1
10.1038/s41598-022-07481-0
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125690366&doi=10.1038%2fs41598-022-07481-0&partnerID=40&md5=dea0d1523af334d111320105bacb176c
Prehospital spinal immobilization is a widely used procedure in the emergency medical service (EMS) system worldwide, while the incidence of patients with spinal injury (SI) is relatively low, and unnecessary prehospital spinal immobilization is associated with patient complications. This study aimed to determine the association between prehospital spine immobilization and favorable functional outcomes at hospital discharge among trauma patients with SI. We conducted a retrospective cohort study using the Pan-Asia Trauma Outcomes Study (PATOS) registry data from January 1, 2016, to November 30, 2018. A total of 759 patients with SI were enrolled from 43,752 trauma patients in the PATOS registry during the study period. The subjects had a median age of 58 years (Q1–Q3, 41–72), and 438 (57.7%) patients had prehospital spine immobilization. Overall, prehospital spinal immobilization was not associated with favorable functional outcomes at discharge in multivariable logistic regression (aOR 1.06; 95% CI 0.62–1.81, p = 0.826). However, in the subgroup of cervical SI, prehospital spinal immobilization was associated with favorable functional outcomes at discharge (aOR 3.14; 95% CI 1.04–9.50; p = 0.043). Therefore, we suggest that paramedics should be more careful when determining the presence of a cervical SI and should apply full spine immobilization if possible. © The Author(s) 2022.
Nature Research
20452322
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Chen H.A.; Hsu S.T.; Shin S.D.; Jamaluddin S.F.; Son D.N.; Hong K.J.; Tanaka H.; Sun J.T.; Chiang W.C.; Ramakrishnan; Jamaluddin; Tanaka; Velasco; Hong; Sun; Khruekarnchana; LLC; Son; Rao; Abraham; Mohidin; Saim; Kean; Anthonysamy; Yssof; Ji; Kheng; Ali; Ramanathan; Yang; Chia; Hamad; Ismail; Abdullah; Kimura; Gundran; Convocar; Sabarre; Tiglao; Hong; Song; Jeong; Moon; Kim; Cha; Lee; Ahn; Lee; Yeom; Ryu; Kim; Kim; Hu; Wang; Hsieh; Kao; Riyapan; Tianwibool; Buaprasert; Akaraborworn; Al Sakaf; Huy; Van Dai
spellingShingle Chen H.A.; Hsu S.T.; Shin S.D.; Jamaluddin S.F.; Son D.N.; Hong K.J.; Tanaka H.; Sun J.T.; Chiang W.C.; Ramakrishnan; Jamaluddin; Tanaka; Velasco; Hong; Sun; Khruekarnchana; LLC; Son; Rao; Abraham; Mohidin; Saim; Kean; Anthonysamy; Yssof; Ji; Kheng; Ali; Ramanathan; Yang; Chia; Hamad; Ismail; Abdullah; Kimura; Gundran; Convocar; Sabarre; Tiglao; Hong; Song; Jeong; Moon; Kim; Cha; Lee; Ahn; Lee; Yeom; Ryu; Kim; Kim; Hu; Wang; Hsieh; Kao; Riyapan; Tianwibool; Buaprasert; Akaraborworn; Al Sakaf; Huy; Van Dai
A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
author_facet Chen H.A.; Hsu S.T.; Shin S.D.; Jamaluddin S.F.; Son D.N.; Hong K.J.; Tanaka H.; Sun J.T.; Chiang W.C.; Ramakrishnan; Jamaluddin; Tanaka; Velasco; Hong; Sun; Khruekarnchana; LLC; Son; Rao; Abraham; Mohidin; Saim; Kean; Anthonysamy; Yssof; Ji; Kheng; Ali; Ramanathan; Yang; Chia; Hamad; Ismail; Abdullah; Kimura; Gundran; Convocar; Sabarre; Tiglao; Hong; Song; Jeong; Moon; Kim; Cha; Lee; Ahn; Lee; Yeom; Ryu; Kim; Kim; Hu; Wang; Hsieh; Kao; Riyapan; Tianwibool; Buaprasert; Akaraborworn; Al Sakaf; Huy; Van Dai
author_sort Chen H.A.; Hsu S.T.; Shin S.D.; Jamaluddin S.F.; Son D.N.; Hong K.J.; Tanaka H.; Sun J.T.; Chiang W.C.; Ramakrishnan; Jamaluddin; Tanaka; Velasco; Hong; Sun; Khruekarnchana; LLC; Son; Rao; Abraham; Mohidin; Saim; Kean; Anthonysamy; Yssof; Ji; Kheng; Ali; Ramanathan; Yang; Chia; Hamad; Ismail; Abdullah; Kimura; Gundran; Convocar; Sabarre; Tiglao; Hong; Song; Jeong; Moon; Kim; Cha; Lee; Ahn; Lee; Yeom; Ryu; Kim; Kim; Hu; Wang; Hsieh; Kao; Riyapan; Tianwibool; Buaprasert; Akaraborworn; Al Sakaf; Huy; Van Dai
title A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
title_short A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
title_full A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
title_fullStr A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
title_full_unstemmed A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
title_sort A multicenter cohort study on the association between prehospital immobilization and functional outcome of patients following spinal injury in Asia
publishDate 2022
container_title Scientific Reports
container_volume 12
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41598-022-07481-0
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125690366&doi=10.1038%2fs41598-022-07481-0&partnerID=40&md5=dea0d1523af334d111320105bacb176c
description Prehospital spinal immobilization is a widely used procedure in the emergency medical service (EMS) system worldwide, while the incidence of patients with spinal injury (SI) is relatively low, and unnecessary prehospital spinal immobilization is associated with patient complications. This study aimed to determine the association between prehospital spine immobilization and favorable functional outcomes at hospital discharge among trauma patients with SI. We conducted a retrospective cohort study using the Pan-Asia Trauma Outcomes Study (PATOS) registry data from January 1, 2016, to November 30, 2018. A total of 759 patients with SI were enrolled from 43,752 trauma patients in the PATOS registry during the study period. The subjects had a median age of 58 years (Q1–Q3, 41–72), and 438 (57.7%) patients had prehospital spine immobilization. Overall, prehospital spinal immobilization was not associated with favorable functional outcomes at discharge in multivariable logistic regression (aOR 1.06; 95% CI 0.62–1.81, p = 0.826). However, in the subgroup of cervical SI, prehospital spinal immobilization was associated with favorable functional outcomes at discharge (aOR 3.14; 95% CI 1.04–9.50; p = 0.043). Therefore, we suggest that paramedics should be more careful when determining the presence of a cervical SI and should apply full spine immobilization if possible. © The Author(s) 2022.
publisher Nature Research
issn 20452322
language English
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accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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