Incidence of Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury in Aragón, Spain (1972–2008) (original) (raw)
Related papers
Change in the profile of traumatic spinal cord injury over 15 years in Spain
Scandinavian journal of trauma, resuscitation and emergency medicine, 2018
Traumatic spinal cord injury remains a serious public health and social problem. Although incidence rates are decreasing in our environment, it is a high cost condition that is associated with great disability. The objective of this study was to describe the epidemiological and demographic characteristics of traumatic spinal cord injury and to analyse its epidemiological changes. This study was an observational study with prospective monitoring of all traumatic spinal cord injury patients in the Canary Islands, Spain (2.1 million inhabitants) between 2001 and 2015. Over the specified period of the study, 282 patients suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury. The crude incidence rate was 9.3 cases per million people/year. The patients' mean age increased from 38 years (2001-2005) to 48 years (2011-2015) (p < 0.05). Overall, 80.1% of patients were males. The trauma mechanisms of spinal cord injury were falls in 44%, traffic accidents in 36.5%, diving accidents in 8.9% and others...
Incidence of Nontraumatic Spinal Cord Injury: A Spanish Cohort Study (1972–2008)
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 2012
Objectives: To assess the incidence of nontraumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) in a determined catchment area in Spain, and to evaluate clinical presentations and trends over time. Design: Retrospective cohort study between January 1972 and December 2008. Setting: A hospital with a specialized SCI unit in a delimited health area in Spain. Participants: Hospital inpatients and outpatients with nontraumatic SCI. Interventions: Not applicable. Main Outcome Measures: Age-and sex-specific incidence rates. Results: An adjusted incidence rate of 11.4 per million population was found for this region (12.3 for males, 10.4 for females). A total of 541 cases (53% male) were reported over the 37-year study period. Incidence rates increased with age, with a peak in the 60-to 69-year age group. Tumors were the major cause of SCI. Most of the lesions were at the thoracic level, and C and D were the most frequently observed American Spinal Injury Association grades. Conclusions: Nontraumatic SCI shows a relatively even sex distribution and tends to affect older adults. Injuries are mainly attributable to age-related conditions and result mostly in incomplete lesions, which present with paraplegia. This study revealed that although incidence rates for nontraumatic SCI are similar to those previously reported for traumatic SCI in the same area and during the same period, demographic and clinical characteristics are different. These findings have important implications regarding the delivery of rehabilitation and support services to this group of patients, and suggest the need for health policies that involve improved care and prevention resources.
Spinal cord injuries – Epidemiology in Portugal's central region
Spinal Cord, 1998
This study concerns spinal cord injuries (SCI) in a region of Portugal with a population of 1 721 650 inhabitants. Legislation has made it possible to identify deaths occurring during collection and transport. Between 1989 and 1992, 398 new cases of spinal cord injuries were identi®ed, of which 77% were male and 23% female. The average age was 50, with a range of between 1 and 92. As far as the type of injury is concerned, there were 154 isolated SCI (38.7%); in 120 cases (30.1%) there were multiple associated injuries; in 66 cases (16.6%) there was an associated traumatic brain injury; in 34 cases (8.5%) there was an associated trauma of the thorax. In the hospitals concerned no Injury Severity Score (ISS) was carried out during hospitalization. Sixty-four (16%) were dead upon arrival at hospital, and 159 (40%) died before release. The average length of hospitalization was 26.6 days, with the maximum being 539 days. The annual incidence rate is 57.8 new cases per million inhabitants, including those who died before being admitted to hospital. The annual survival rate is 25.4 new cases per million inhabitants. The death rate is very high during the ®rst week, peaking during the ®rst 24 h.
Epidemiological Study of Spinal Injuries
Neurosurgical research. Epidemiological research of these injuries will increase our knowledge and help the Health Authority blueprint better services that offered.
Epidemiology of Post-Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury in a Tertiary Hospital
Acta Ortopédica Brasileira
Objective: to outline the profile of risk groups for spinal cord injury (SCI) at the Hospital de Clinicas de Campinas by an epidemiological survey of 41 patients with SCI. Methods: Data from patients with SCI were collected and analyzed: demographic data, level of neurological injury, visual analogue scale (VAS), and the current American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) impairment scale (AIS), using questionnaires, medical records, and imaging tests. Fisher’s exact test was used to assess the relationship between categorical variables, Spearman’s correlation coefficient was used for numerical variables, and the Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to analyze the relationship between categorical and numerical variables, with significance level of 5%. Results: There was a prevalence of 82.9% of men, a mean age of 26.5 years, and traffic accidents as the cause of SCI in 56.1% of cases. Conclusion: Results suggest the importance of SCI prevention campaigns directed at this po...
Global prevalence and incidence of traumatic spinal cord injury
Clinical Epidemiology, 2014
Background: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a traumatic event that impacts a patient's physical, psychological, and social well-being and places substantial financial burden on health care systems. To determine the true impact of SCI, this systematic review aims to summarize literature reporting on either the incidence or prevalence of SCI. Methods: A systematic search was conducted using PubMed, MEDLINE, MEDLINE in process, EMBASE, Cochrane Controlled Trial Register, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews to identify relevant literature published through June 2013. We sought studies that provided regional, provincial/state, or national data on the incidence of SCI or reported estimates of disease prevalence. The level of evidence of each study was rated using a scale that evaluated study design, methodology, sampling bias, and precision of estimates. Results: The initial search yielded 5,874 articles, 48 of which met the inclusion criteria. Forty-four studies estimated the incidence of SCI and nine reported the prevalence, with five discussing both. Of the incidence studies, 14 provided figures at a regional, ten at a state or provincial level and 21 at a national level. The prevalence of SCI was highest in the United States of America (906 per million) and lowest in the Rhone-Alpes region, France (250 per million) and Helsinki, Finland (280 per million). With respect to states and provinces in North America, the crude annual incidence of SCI was highest in Alaska (83 per million) and Mississippi (77 per million) and lowest in Alabama (29.4 per million), despite a large percentage of violence injuries (21.2%). Annual incidences were above 50 per million in the Hualien County in Taiwan (56.1 per million), the central Portugal region (58 per million), and Olmsted County in Minnesota (54.8 per million) and were lower than 20 per million in Taipei, Taiwan (14.6 per million), the Rhone-Alpes region in France (12.7 per million), Aragon, Spain (12.1 per million), Southeast Turkey (16.9 per million), and Stockholm, Sweden (19.5 per million). The highest national incidence was 49.1 per million in New Zealand, and the lowest incidences were in Fiji (10.0 per million) and Spain (8.0 per million). The majority of studies showed a high male-to-female ratio and an age of peak incidence of younger than 30 years old. Traffic accidents were typically the most common cause of SCI, followed by falls in the elderly population. Conclusion: This review demonstrates that the incidence, prevalence, and causation of SCI differs between developing and developed countries and suggests that management and preventative strategies need to be tailored to regional trends. The rising aging population in westernized countries also indicates that traumatic SCI secondary to falls may become an increasing public health challenge and that incidence among the elderly may rise with increasing life expectancy.
The profile of spinal injuries in Porto Alegre
Fisioterapia e Pesquisa, 2013
janeiro de 2005 a janeiro de 2010 foi investigado retrospectivamente a partir da coleta de dados em registros médicos. Foram analisados 1320 prontuários, dos quais 63,3% eram do sexo masculino, com média de idade de 47,02±19,60 anos. Os mecanismos de TRM que prevaleceram foram queda de altura (27,2%), acidente de trânsito (25,8%) e queda da própria altura (13,2%), e os níveis da coluna vertebral mais acometidos foram lombar (35,6%), torácico (21,9%) e cervical (20,5%). Da amostra total, 10,7% dos indivíduos que sofreram TRM apresentaram lesão medular (LM), com maior prevalência da lesão incompleta (63,3%). O TRM em Porto Alegre acomete principalmente homens na meia-idade, que tiveram na queda de altura a etiologia mais frequente e no nível lombar o mais acometido. A LM ocorreu mais em indivíduos jovens, sendo o nível cervical o mais lesado. Esses achados são importantes para orientar a alocação eficiente de recursos para o manejo desses agravos e suas repercussões e para prevenir a sua ocorrência nas populações em risco. Descritores | traumatismos da coluna vertebral; compressão da medula espinal; traumatismos da medula espinal; epidemiologia. RESUMEN | Este estudio transversal fue desarrollado con el objetivo de trazar el perfil de la población que sufrió trauma raquimedular (TRM) y fue internado en hospitales de emergencia de Puerto Alegre/RS. El perfil de la población que sufrió TRM de enero de 2005 a enero de 2010 ABSTRACT | This transversal study aimed at determining the profile of the population who suffered spinal injury (SI) and was admitted to emergency hospitals in Porto Alegre/RS. The profile of the population who had SI between January 2005 and January 2010 was retrospectively investigated through data collected from medical records. A total of 1320 records were analyzed, of which 63.3% were male, with a mean age of 47.02±19.6 years. The most prevalent spinal cord injury (SCI) mechanisms were falls from a height (27.2%), traffic accidents (25.8%) and falls from own height (13.2%) and the spinal levels that are usually affected were lumbar (35, 6%), thoracic (21.9%) and cervical (20.5%). Only 142 (10.7%) individuals who had a SI SCI, with a higher prevalence of incomplete lesion (63.3%). In Porto Alegre SI affects mainly middle aged men, who fell from a height and had the lumbar level as the most affected. The SCI affects younger individuals at the cervical level. These findings are important to guide the efficient allocation of resources for the management of these injuries and their repercussions and to prevent this kind of event in the risk population. Keywords | spinal injuries; spinal cord compression; spinal cord injuries; epidemiology. RESUMO | Este estudo de coorte retrospectivo foi desenvolvido com o objetivo de traçar o perfil da população que sofreu trauma raquimedular (TRM) e foi internada em hospitais de pronto atendimento de Porto Alegre/RS. O perfil da população que sofreu TRM de The profile of spinal injuries in Porto Alegre Estudo do perfil do trauma raquimedular em Porto Alegre Estudio del perfil de trauma raquimedular en Puerto Alegre
Traumatic injury to the spinal cord. Prevalence in Brazilian hospitals
Paraplegia, 1992
Traumatic spinal cord lesions have a worldwide high morbidity and mortality, and in many developed countries the problem has received special attention, based on epidemiological studies. In Brazil these studies have been restricted to institutional data. In 1988 a survey conducted by the Integrated System of Traumatology and Orthopaedics, covering 36 public hospitals from 7 Brazilian capitals, revealed a point prevalence of 8.6% (108 patients) with spinal cord injury, aged from 6-56 years; 81% were men. The most frequent causes were traffic accidents (42%), firearms (27%) and falling from heights (15%). The main complications were pressure ulcers (54%) and urinary infections (32%).