![]() One third of injuries occur at the level of C2, and one half of injuries occur at the level of C6 or C7. Most cervical spine fractures occur predominantly at two levels. Up to 17% of patients have a missed or delayed diagnosis of cervical spine injury, with a risk of permanent neurologic deficit after missed injury of 29%. This review is based on a presentation given by Adam Flanders and adapted for the Radiology Assistant by Robin Smithuis.Īpproximately 3 % of patients who present to the emergency department as the result of a motor vehicle accident or fall have a major injury to the cervical spine.ġ0-20% patients with head injury also have a cervical spine injury. How to Differentiate Carotid Obstructions.Ankle fractures - Weber and Lauge-Hansen Classification.Ankle Fracture Mechanism and Radiography.TI-RADS - Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System.Head Neck tumors - When to think of malignancy.Anatomy and Pathology of the Infrahyoid Neck.Pulmonary nodule - Benign versus Malignant.Mediastinal Masses - differential diagnosis.Esophagus II: Strictures, Acute syndromes, Neoplasms and Vascular impressions.Esophagus I: anatomy, rings, inflammation.Vascular Anomalies of Aorta, Pulmonary and Systemic vessels.Contrast-enhanced MRA of peripheral vessels.Ischemic and non-ischemic cardiomyopathy.Coronary Artery Disease-Reporting and Data System 2.0.Bi-RADS for Mammography and Ultrasound 2013. ![]() Transvaginal Ultrasound for Non-Gynaecological Conditions.Acute Abdomen in Gynaecology - Ultrasound.Appendicitis - Pitfalls in US and CT diagnosis.
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