Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 38, Issue 1 , Pages 26-30, July 2001

Football protective gear and cervical spine imaging☆☆

Presented at the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine annual meeting, Atlanta, GA, May 2001.

From the Departments of Emergency Medicine* and Sports Medicine, Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME

Received 22 March 2001; received in revised form 5 April 2001; accepted 10 April 2001.

Address for correspondence: John H. Burton, MD, Department of Emergency Medicine, Maine Medical Center, 47 Bramhall Street, Portland, ME 04102; 207-772-8850,fax 207-772-4036;,E-mail burtoj@mmc.org

Abstract 

Study Objective: We sought to assess the effect of football protective gear on the cervical spine radiographic evaluation of adult male subjects. Methods: The study used a prospective, randomized, matched-pairs, observational design. Subjects served as their own control subjects, with cross-table lateral and open-mouth odontoid cervical spine radiographs. Radiographs were obtained with protective head and shoulder equipment (pads group) and without protective equipment (no pads group). Two emergency physicians and 2 neuroradiologists reviewed study radiographs. Physicians assessed radiographic views for adequate cervical spine visualization to the C7-T1 level and the odontoid and related structures. Comparison of radiographic readings for the pads and no pads groups used the McNemar exact test. A McNemar test of equality of paired proportions was used to estimate a population of 20 paired individuals to detect a significant outcome difference. Results: Zero percent of the pads group’s cross-table lateral structures were adequately visualized by all 4 reviewers (reviewer unanimity decision) compared with 25% of the no pads group’s cross-table lateral films (between-group difference 25%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 6.0 to 44). When 3 of 4 reviewers noted adequate visualization (reviewer majority decision), 0% of the pads group’s cross-table lateral structures were adequately visualized versus 40% of the no pads group’s cross-table lateral radiographs (between-group difference 40%; 95% CI 19 to 62). With reviewer unanimity, 25% of the pads group’s open-mouth odontoid structures were visualized versus 45% of the no pads group’s open-mouth odontoid structures (between-group difference 20%; 95% CI –8.9 to 49). With reviewer majority analysis, 35% of the pads group’s odontoid radiographs were adequately visualized versus 75% of the no pads group’s open-mouth odontoid radiographs (between-group difference 40%; 95% CI 12 to 68). Conclusion: Football head and shoulder protective equipment appears to be an impediment to cervical spine radiographic visualization. Guidelines for players’ cervical spine imaging should incorporate procedures for removal of equipment before initial radiographic evaluation. [Davidson RM, Burton JH, Snowise M, Owens WB. Football protective gear and cervical spine imaging. Ann Emerg Med. July 2001;38:26-30.]

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 Author contributions are provided at the end of this article.

☆☆ This work was supported by a grant from the Maine Medical Center Medical Research Committee.

 Reprints not available from the authors.

PII: S0196-0644(01)97146-X

doi:10.1067/mem.2001.116333

Refers to article:

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    Joseph F. Waeckerle, Douglas M. Kleiner
    Annals of Emergency Medicine July 2001 (Vol. 38, Issue 1, Pages 65-67)

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 38, Issue 1 , Pages 26-30, July 2001