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my son had a fall from 5 or 6 ft up head first onto concrete from a playground structure, on july 27th. He immediately had a nosebleed but was moving arms and legs, so I stood him up and he raised his arms and shoulders and grimacing screaming, MY NECK! I took him to a hospital but they said oh well I think he is a 3 outta four and not a serious injury. So he played and seemed ok so we left. that night I noticed a rt scalp goose egg. The next day he was ok, but by the next day he could not look up at all. I took him back and a xray showed soft tissue prominence. So they suggested CT and we waited NPO for 5 hrs. At the time we were to do CT the new doc on shift came in and took me out to a computer showing me the xray. It was greek to me, but he said it was normal for chunky kids like mine, and sent us out. I got a copy and googled the result and was appalled and called the ER. They said oh he is fine and send him back to school. DONT come back here. I waited and a week later, Then I returned there and said you need to Rule out his injury definitively or the consequences could be catastrophic w a neck injury. They reluctantly ordered a CT, and still NO Neck brace and held him down 4-5 times afterwords. Sedation failed 3 times and we were admitted and the next am, a MRI of the neck was done. marrow edema at C1, and also fluid at the c1 c2 capsular articulation was noted. My son had to wear a c-collar for one month. He started c/o headaches and once I was changing the pads and my son dipped his head down and back and I heard a crackling noise. The neurosurgeon made no concern regarding the click and his resident stated this is NORMAL everyone has cracking bones. I went back for a Davis series sept 6th and my son did extension and flexion x rays. Immediately afterword the Dr. came and stated, Noah does not have to wear a brace anymore and I will send a letter to your pediatrician, but he never did. He added no follow ups were needed. Ten days later my son was leaning his head back as I washed his hair and he said MOM, you hurt my neck and got out and ran to the toilet and said I am going to throw up! This was reported to neurologist and still no call back as if not to worry about it. So, does this sound like standard of care for his injury as far as a month in a c-collar and no follow ups although he had nausea and pain still? Would DMX xrays help find out what is wrong, and if the injury is stable? I wanna know for sure that he is not going to fall running or playing or in the future with sports, that he wont have a weak neck and become paralyzed or worse. I know the care was bad, at the hospital because the grievance committee dropped all bills. I do not trust them really now so If it was your child what would you do? thanks Kelley RN at Baylor Medical Center Irving ortho/neuro unit
You have run into the typical bureaucracy of a teaching hospital where everyone is overworked and there is no one individual who takes responsibility for one patient.
Children of your son’s age can injure growth plates which are made of cartilage and do not show up very well on X-rays and CT scans. MRIs are more sensitive and it seems like an injury to the C1-2 region was likely; “marrow edema at C1, and also fluid at the c1 c2 capsular articulation was noted”.
Children can heal quickly and hopefully in six weeks your son has healed his injury. New X-rays should demonstrate normal anatomical relationships and flexion/extension X-rays can be quite helpful. I am not a fan of DMX (video X-rays) as they are not generally helpful and expose the patient to tremendous amounts of X-ray radiation.
A good pediatric orthopaedic spine surgeon at a local children’s hospital should be able to look at your son and give you peace of mind.
Dr. Corenman
PLEASE REMEMBER, THIS FORUM IS MEANT TO PROVIDE GENERAL INFORMATION ON SPINE ANATOMY, CONDITIONS AND TREATMENTS. TO GET AN ACCURATE DIAGNOSIS, YOU MUST VISIT A QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL IN PERSON.
Donald Corenman, MD, DC is a highly-regarded spine surgeon, considered an expert in the area of neck and back pain. Trained as both a Medical Doctor and Doctor of Chiropractic, Dr. Corenman earned academic appointments as Clinical Assistant Professor and Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and his research on spine surgery and rehabilitation has resulted in the publication of multiple peer-reviewed articles and two books. -
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