Emergency Care Journal (Jun 2024)

Do not move! Spinal immobilization or spinal motor restriction: the long-lasting debate from the Napoleonic Wars to 2024 SIMEU policy statement

  • Sossio Serra,
  • Erika Poggiali,
  • Mario Rugna,
  • Fabio De Iaco,
  • Lorenzo Ghiadoni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/ecj.2024.12745
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2

Abstract

Read online

The management of spinal trauma in the pre-hospital setting is based on techniques of immobilization for prevention of secondary neurological damage in high-risk patients during transportation.1 Since the ’70s, the traditional form of Preventive Spinal Immobilization (PSI) has been carried out using a long spinal board, head blocks, and immobilization straps often associated with the placement of a cervical collar.2 The first documentation of this practice comes from the early 19th century, when pre-hospital trauma care was introduced on the battlefields of the Napoleonic Wars.3 This strategy is still adopted by many pre-hospital medical services worldwide and taught as the gold standard on many trauma courses. The traditional form of PSI is indeed based more on pragmatism than on high-quality studies supporting its efficacy.3 [...]

Keywords