SplintER Series: The Tooth of the Cervical Spine

 

80-year-old male patient brought in by ambulance for a witnessed fall. A cervical collar was placed by EMS because of midline neck pain. The patient is neurologically intact. A CT of the cervical spine was obtained and is shown above (Case courtesy of Dr. Talal F M Abdullah, Radiopaedia.org, rID: 58030).

 

 

80-year-old male patient brought in by ambulance for a witnessed fall. A cervical collar was placed by EMS because of midline neck pain. The patient is neurologically intact. A CT of the cervical spine was obtained and is shown above (Case courtesy of Dr. Talal F M Abdullah, Radiopaedia.org, rID: 58030).

 

 

Odontoid fracture, type II. The odontoid process, or dens, is a superior bony projection of C2 that, along with the transverse ligament, is a key stabilizer of C1.

Figure 2. Case courtesy of Dr. Talal F M Abdullah, Radiopaedia.org, rID: 58030. Annotations by author, fracture highlighted in red

  • Pearl: Odontoid fractures can occur in elderly patients via a low energy mechanism like ground-level falls. They may also occur in younger patients during high-energy trauma that causes hyperflexion or hyperextension.

Type I: Alar ligament avulsion fracture of the apex. Stable

Type II: Fracture at the waist of the odontoid process. Unstable

Type III: Fracture of the body of C2 with involvement of the lateral masses. Unstable

Figure 3. Case courtesy of Dr. Mohammad Taghi Niknejad, Radiopaedia.org, rID: 21310. Odontoid fractures type 1, 2, and 3 from left to right

  • Pearl: Type II fractures have a high nonunion rate because the waist of the odontoid process has limited blood supply for two reasons [1]:
    • Vascular supply arrives from the apex and the base, forming a watershed area at the waist.
    • The waist lacks cancellous bone, which contains a highly vascularized meshwork of bone and blood vessels that allows for faster healing.

The patient should be placed in a cervical collar and maintained in strict spinal precautions. A spine surgeon should be consulted emergently as guided by institutional protocols. MRI can be obtained if neurologic symptoms are present. 

  • PEARL: Management typically includes the following
    • Type I   -> hard cervical collar for 6-12wk.
    • Type II  -> operative management (screw fixation or C1-2 posterior fusion) [1-2].
    • Type III -> hard cervical collar or halo immobilization [1].

 

Resources & References:

Check out this Paucis Verbis card to review cervical spine imaging rules. 

  1. Egol K, Koval, KJ, Zuckerman JD. Handbook of Fractures. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 2010 ISBN: 160547760.
  2. Gembruch O, Lemonas E, Ahmadipour Y, Sure U, El Hindy N, Dodel R, Müller O. Treatment of Odontoid Type II Fractures in Octogenarians: Balancing Two Different Treatment Strategies. Neurospine. 2019 Jun;16(2):360-367. Epub 2019 Feb 23. PMID: 31154696.
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Author information

BuMin Kong, MD

BuMin Kong, MD

Resident

Department of Emergency Medicine

Loma Linda University Medical Center

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