<I>Associated Injuries and Mechanism of Atlanto-occipital Dislocation Caused by Trauma</I>

  • IMAIZUMI Toshio
    Department of Neurosurgery Sapporo City General Hospital
  • SOHMA Tsutomu
    Department of Neurosurgery Sapporo City General Hospital
  • HOTTA Haruhiko
    Department of Neurosurgery Sapporo City General Hospital
  • TETO Ichiro
    Division of Emergency Medicine Sapporo City General Hospital
  • IMAIZUMI Hitoshi
    Division of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Sapporo Medical University
  • KANEKO Mitsuo
    Division of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Sapporo Medical University

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Injuries associated with traumatic atlanto-occipital dislocation (AOD) leading to death were analyzed in 11 patients, nine injured by traffic accidents, of which five were victims of car-pedestrian accidents. On admission, unconsciousness and respiratory arrest were noted in all patients, and cardiac arrest in nine. Skull and cervical roentgenograms revealed enlargement of the retropharyngeal space due to injury of the vertebral artery or its branches in nine patients, atlanto-axial dislocation (C-1-C-2 separation) in four, and skull fracture in four. Computed tomography demonstrated subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) in the upper cervical and posterior fossa in nine patients, fourth ventricular hematoma in seven, and atlas fracture in three. SAH and ventricular hematoma were due to craniocervical injury. Other common injuries were injury of face and head excluding the mandibular region in 10 patients, mandibular fracture in three, severe chest injuries in eight, and intraperitoneal bleeding in two. The overall outcome was poor. Nine patients died within 13 hours of admission, one was diagnosed as brain dead 8 days after the accident, and the other one survived in a persistent vegetative state. Early death is probably caused by associated severe injuries, i.e. chest injuries and intraperitoneal bleeding rather than AOD. Although injury of the mandibular region is known to be associated with AOD, head, breast, and abdominal trauma may also lead to neck hyperextension-flexion in various directions. Whatever the direct cause, a distractive force to the craniocervical joint by hyperextension-flexion appears to be important in the mechanism of AOD.

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