Documenting Cervical Spine Injuries Following Negative MRI Findings: Clinical and Medico-Legal Overview of Dynamic Imaging
Leonard F Vernon, Adam Benn

TL;DR
This paper discusses the importance of dynamic imaging in diagnosing cervical spine injuries when MRI results are negative, especially in legal contexts.
Contribution
The paper emphasizes the underutilized role of dynamic imaging in diagnosing ligament instability in whiplash-associated disorders.
Findings
Dynamic imaging is essential for diagnosing ligament instability when MRI and CT findings are negative.
The cervical curve serves as a clinical indicator of vertebral column injury severity.
Accurate diagnosis of WAD is challenging without dynamic imaging, especially in litigation cases.
Abstract
Because of the lack of uniformity in describing injuries to the cervical spine following trauma, such as motor vehicle accidents, the Government of Quebec convened a multidisciplinary task force in the 1990s to attempt to standardize the terminology for the classification, management, and prognosis for such injuries. The term "whiplash-associated disorders" (WAD) was adopted and has become the universally recognized umbrella term for the myriad of symptoms caused by severe acceleration and deceleration forces applied to the head, craniocervical junction, and cervical spine following trauma. Obtaining an accurate diagnosis and prognosis for individuals with WAD is challenging, especially when magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography findings are negative. This becomes more critical when litigation is involved. However, the often overlooked and underutilized imaging modality of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Cervical and Thoracic Myelopathy
