Who gets traumatic spinal cord injury?: A Finnish tertiary trauma centre study
Luoto, Elina; Koskinen, Eerika; Thesleff, Tuomo; Mäntymäki, Heikki; Långsjö, Jaakko; Jämsen, Esa; Luoto, Teemu M. (2026)
Luoto, Elina
Koskinen, Eerika
Thesleff, Tuomo
Mäntymäki, Heikki
Långsjö, Jaakko
Jämsen, Esa
Luoto, Teemu M.
2026
Frontiers in Neurology
1709012
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202603042951
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202603042951
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Study design: Prospective cohort study. Objectives: To characterize patients with a new traumatic spinal cord injury and their pre-injury profiles. Setting: Tampere University Hospital, Finland. Methods: Newly injured patients (n = 46, male = 89%, mean age = 66y) with an acute cervical or thoracic traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) were recruited. They were evaluated and interviewed within 72 h postinjury. Health and medication history was gathered by interview and from electronic medical records. The International Standards for Neurological Classification of Spinal Cord Injury were used to classify the neurological consequences of TSCI. Epidemiological characteristics were recorded according to the International SCI Core Data Sets. Results: The leading causes of injury were low-level falls (48%), high-level falls (26%), and transport accidents (15%). Among patients >60 years, 63% were injured by low-level falls. Tetraplegia occurred in 87% of patients >60, compared to 63% ≤ 60 years. AIS D was the most common injury grade (44%). Complete injuries were seen in 38% of younger patients and 17% of older patients. Most patients had prior medication (72%) and at least one diagnosed disease (87%), both increasing in the older group. Overweight and low physical activity were common pre-injury characteristics. Alcohol preceded injury in 37% of cases. Low-level falls mostly caused cervical injuries (96%) and the patients seemed to have more diseases, fall-risk-increasing drugs and reduced physical activity levels compared to other etiologies. Conclusion: Low-level falls, particularly in older patients, were the leading cause of TSCI, often resulting in incomplete tetraplegia. Age-specific prevention strategies, especially fall prevention for older adults, are essential.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [24216]
