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Cervical-Spine Injuries in Children
40
Citations
0
References
1958
Year
Spine DeformityInjury PreventionSurgeryOrthopaedic SurgeryPediatric SpineCervical-spine InjuriesSpinal Cord InjuryNormal VariantSpinal InjuryNeck DisabilitySinal SurgerySpinal TraumaPediatricsFlexed Cervical SpineNeck PathologyConcussionScoliosisMedicineCervical Spine
Some children up to the age of nine years, who are normal otherwise, may show a partial anterior subluxation of the second on the third cervical vertebra. This is considered a normal variant in the appearance of lateral roentgenograms of the flexed cervical spine. A survey of forty-seven children in three different children's hospitals, all without symptoms or clinical evidence of neck disability, revealed that five children had marked subluxation of the second on the third cervical vertebra, and that three had borderline dislocations. Children who have these normal variations should not be subjected to extensive orthopaedic treatment, unless there has been a history of sufficient injury to the neck and clinical examination bears out the probability that these are pathological subluxations.