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67

EMR

EMT

AEMT

Paramedic

Extended

Spine Injured Athletes

Spine Injured Athletes

Clinical Considerations

Current NATA recommendations are designed to guide clinical judgment. They are not law.

Athletes with potential spine injury wearing protective gear complicates lifting, movement, and assessment

Care should be taken to move the spine injured athlete in the most effective way to reduce spine motion.

Patients who are ambulatory on scene should be instructed to sit on the cot.

The intent of the rigid spine board is to facilitate movement and extrication. It provides no benefit and may

cause harm to a patient once they are on the ambulance cot.

Every effort should be taken to remove the patient from the rigid spine board as soon as it is possible

If any doubt exists whether or not a patient has a spine injury, utilize spine motion restriction

Apply manual c-spine control if any Mechanism of Injury for spine trauma exists

Significant MOI

Head-to-head collision

Head-down tackle

Axial loading

Recreational vehicles

Questionable MOI

Player down after tackle,

unknown injury pattern

Hit/punched above clavicles

Any doubt

Minimal MOI or no energy

applied to the spine

Isolated extremity injuries

Spine Motion Restriction

Not Indicated

Stabilize injury and transport

Consider

Pain Management

NEXUS Criteria Examination

GCS < 15 in any patient

Intoxication

Neurological Deficit

Midline Spine Tenderness

Distracting Injury

No Abnormality

Any Abnormality

Evaluate need for

protective

equipment removal

Remove if indicated

Apply

Rigid Spine Board

or

Scoop-Style Stretcher

Move patient to ambulance cot

Continue with transport

As soon as it is feasible, remove

from rigid device.

Clinical Considerations

Protective equipment removal is indicated in loss of consciousness,

airway compromise, suspected hidden injuries, or any life threats.

Be a patient advocate. It is

critical

that the patient spends

minimal

time on a rigid spine device.

Weigh the risks/benefits of rigid device removal vs. management of

life threats, scene time, patient comfort, and difficulty of removal

Do not logroll the spine injured athlete to a backboard unless found

prone; use the NATA recommended 8 person slide technique

If the helmet must be removed, so must the shoulder/torso pads