CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Rare case of survival after traumatic disruption of the cervical spine with combined complete spinal cord injury and bilateral vertebral arterial breakdown in an 18-month-old patient.

Complete cervical disruption is a rare and lethal injury secondary to high-energy trauma. Bilateral vertebral arterial breakdown is also a rare and lethal injury. This is the first reported clinical case of an 18-month-old girl who survived after combined cervical spinal cord disruption and bilateral vertebral arterial breakdown. Although she developed cardiopulmonary arrest at the accident site, resuscitation by a bystander, early fluid resuscitation, appropriate respiratory management, and subsequent surgical stabilization resulted in survival and preservation of higher cortical functions. She underwent surgery 1 week after hospitalization; her cervical spine was stabilized by posterior fixation using pedicle screws and transarticular screws. After the operation, the burst vertebra was gradually remodeled. Approximately 4 months later, she was transferred to a rehabilitation facility. Ten years later, she is attending to an elementary school, and she is able to speak and operate a wheelchair using a portable respiratory organ. We herein report an exceedingly rare case of cervical cord injury involving a combination of disruption of the cervical spine and bilateral vertebral arterial breakdown in a young child.

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