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Spinal Injuries Due To Hockey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

Charles H. Tator
Affiliation:
Acute Spinal Cord Injury Unit, Division of Neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Medical Centre, University of Toronto
Chris E.U. Ekong
Affiliation:
Acute Spinal Cord Injury Unit, Division of Neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Medical Centre, University of Toronto
David W. Rowed
Affiliation:
Acute Spinal Cord Injury Unit, Division of Neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Medical Centre, University of Toronto
Michael L. Schwartz
Affiliation:
Acute Spinal Cord Injury Unit, Division of Neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Medical Centre, University of Toronto
Virginia E. Edmonds
Affiliation:
Acute Spinal Cord Injury Unit, Division of Neurosurgery, Sunnybrook Medical Centre, University of Toronto
Perry W. Cooper
Affiliation:
Department of Radiology, Sunnybrook Medical Centre, University of Toronto
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Summary

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Although many types of sports and recreational activities have been identified as common causes of acute spinal cord injury, hockey has been a rare cause of acute cord injury in Canada or elsewhere. For example, from 1948 to 1973 there were no patients with cord injuries due to hockey in a series of 55 patients with acute cord injuries due to sports or other recreational activities admitted to two Toronto hospitals. In contrast, between 1974 and 1981, the Acute Spinal Cord Injury Unit, Sunnybrook Medical Centre treated six patients with cervical spinal injury due to hockey, five of whom were seen during a 13 month period from September, 1980 to October, 1981. Five of the six sustained a severe acute cervical spinal cord injury, and one a cervical root injury. The cord injury was complete in two cases, while three had complete motor loss but incomplete sensory loss below the level of the lesion. All were males aged 15 to 26 years. Of the players with cord injury, four struck the boards with the neck flexed, and one struck another player with the neck flexed. The one player without cord injury struck the boards with his neck extended. The commonest bony injury was a burst fracture of C5 or C6. One of the patients with a complete cord injury died three months later of a pulmonary embolus, and the other patients with cord injury showed some recovery of root function, but little or no cord recovery. The reasons for the increase in spinal injuries in hockey are unknown.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation 1984

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