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In this book on the optimal treatment of the injured spinal cord we
present the reasons why we consider it necessary to handle trauma
tized medullary tissue in accordance with the classical biological
principles of wound healing in general, namely by long-term, ten
sion-free immobilization of the spinal cord. Today, such immobili
zation for this purpose can only be achieved by surgical secure
ment of slight dorsiflexion of the cervical spine. Traumatically
compressed medullary tissue is invariably attenu ated and weakened.
On application of skull traction, the weakened section of the
compressed cervical cord is the part that is most overstretched.
This inevitably results in increased neurological def icit. On
scrutiny of the clinical records of 100 tetraplegic patients
treated by skull traction at the National Spinal Injuries Centre at
the Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury, England, from 1971 to
1982, we found that therapeutic skull traction had been followed by
an immediate increase in neurological deficit in 12% of the
patients - a relatively high figure for the type of case in which
beneficial effects oftraction were habitually anticipated.
Moreover, in studies on cadavers, artificial defects in fresh human
cervical cord in situ showed typical deformation following
application of traction, confirming the basic deleterious effects
of therapeutic skull traction on the injured cervical cord."
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