Evaluating the Routine Use of Cervical Immobilisation in Pre-Hospital Trauma Care: Risks and Benefits

Louisa Nel*, Chaojie Liu (Editor)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

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Abstract

Early cervical spine immobilisation (CSI) has long been a critical component of the pre-hospitalmanagement of traumatic injuries with possible spinal cord injury. CSI aims to stabilise the spineto prevent worsening an unstable injury. There is conflicting evidence regarding its effectiveness, and concerns exist about the potential risks, including neurological damage, respiratory compromise, and difficulty performing intubation. This article will review the relevant literatureto assess whether CSI should continue to be used routinely in pre-hospital trauma care. A literaturereview was conducted using the Web of Science, Cinahl, Embase, Medline and Cochrane databases, and manual searches of reference lists. Articles published after 2010 were included.Selection was based on the title and abstract, followed by a full-text review. No studies directly compare outcomes between immobilisation and non-immobilisation, hence, it is difficult to determine whether the benefits outweigh the risks. The potential adverse effects of CSI have beenmore robustly evidenced than the benefits of CSI. Therefore, CSI may not be appropriate forroutine use and should be limited to patients at higher risk of an unstable spinal injury. Further research is necessary to assess whether CSI reduces morbidity and mortality of spinal injuries.
Original languageEnglish
Article number0301
JournalBristol Institute for Learning and Teaching (BILT) Student Research Journal
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2025

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  • BILT Student Research Journal 2025 - Issue 6

    Liu, J. (Principal Investigator), Gu, S. (Co-Investigator), Sudi, L. (Co-Investigator), Harvey, C. L. (Manager) & Palmer, A. C. (Manager)

    10/09/2415/08/25

    Project: Research

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