» Articles » PMID: 33868856

Spinal Injury Associated With Firearm Use

Overview
Journal Cureus
Date 2021 Apr 19
PMID 33868856
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective Injuries associated with firearms are a significant health burden. However, there is no comprehensive study of firearm spinal injuries over a large population. It was the purpose of this study to analyze the demographics of spinal firearm injuries across the entire United States for all ages using a national database. Methods A retrospective review of prospectively collected data using the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research Firearm Injury Surveillance Study 1993-2015 (ICPSR 37276) was performed. The demographic variables of patients with spinal injuries due to firearms were analyzed with statistical analyses accounting for the weighted, stratified nature of the data, using SUDAAN 11.0.01™ software (RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, 2013). A p-value of < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results For the years 1993 through 2015, there were an estimated 2,667,896 emergency department (ED) visits for injuries due to firearms; 10,296 of these injuries (0.4%) involved the spine. The vast majority (98.2%) were due to powder firearm gunshot wounds. Those with a spine injury were more likely to have been injured in an assault (83.7% vs. 60.2%), involved a handgun (83.5% vs. 60.2%), were male (90.8% vs. 86.4%), were admitted to the hospital (86.8% vs. 30.9%), and were seen in urban hospitals (86.7 vs. 64.6%). The average age was 28 years with very few on those < 14 years of age. Illicit drug involvement was over four times as frequent in those with a spine injury (34.7% vs. 8.0%). The cervical spine was involved in 30%, thoracic in 32%, lumbar in 32%, and sacrum in 6%. A fracture occurred in 91.8% and neurologic injury in 33%. Injuries to the thoracic spine had the highest percentage of neurologic involvement (50.4%). There was an annual percentage decrease for patients with and without spine involvement in the 1990s, followed by increases through 2015. The average percentage increase for patients with a spine injury was 10.3% per year from 1997 onwards (p < 10), significantly greater than the 1.5% for those without spinal involvement (p = 0.0001) from 1999 onwards. Conclusions This nation-wide study of spinal injuries associated with firearms covering all ages can be used as baseline data for future firearm studies. A reduction in the incidence of such injuries can be guided by our findings but may be difficult due to sociopolitical barriers (e.g. socioeconomic status of the injured patients, differences in political opinion regarding gun control in the US, and geospatial patterns of firearm injury).

Citing Articles

Changes in pediatric fracture patterns presenting to US emergency departments before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Loder R, Johnson B Heliyon. 2023; 9(11):e20953.

PMID: 37920510 PMC: 10618497. DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20953.


Fractures in Children Due to Firearm Activity.

Loder R, Luster T Children (Basel). 2023; 10(4).

PMID: 37189900 PMC: 10136767. DOI: 10.3390/children10040651.


Meningitis due to intra-abdominal cerebrospinal fluid fistula following gunshot wound successfully treated with antibiotics and blood patch: A case report and literature review.

George D, Houk C, Pieters T, Towner J, Stone J Surg Neurol Int. 2022; 13:308.

PMID: 35928328 PMC: 9345101. DOI: 10.25259/SNI_390_2022.


Impact of Firearm Surveillance on Gun Control Policy: Regression Discontinuity Analysis.

Post L, Mason M, Singh L, Wleklinski N, Moss C, Mohammad H JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2021; 7(4):e26042.

PMID: 33783360 PMC: 8103291. DOI: 10.2196/26042.

References
1.
Fife D, Kraus J . Anatomic location of spinal cord injury. Relationship to the cause of injury. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1986; 11(1):2-5. DOI: 10.1097/00007632-198601000-00002. View

2.
Hopkins R . Consumer product-related injuries in Athens, Ohio, 1980-85: assessment of emergency room-based surveillance. Am J Prev Med. 1989; 5(2):104-12. View

3.
Hyak J, Todd H, Rubalcava D, Vogel A, Fallon S, Naik-Mathuria B . Barely benign: The dangers of BB and other nonpowder guns. J Pediatr Surg. 2020; 55(8):1604-1609. DOI: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2020.02.010. View

4.
Kochanek K, Murphy S, Xu J, Arias E . Deaths: Final Data for 2017. Natl Vital Stat Rep. 2020; 68(9):1-77. View

5.
Tobon M, Ledgerwood A, Lucas C . The urban injury severity score (UISS) better predicts mortality following penetrating gunshot wounds (GSW). Am J Surg. 2018; 217(3):573-576. DOI: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2018.09.013. View