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Sport injuries of the cervical spine

Abstract

The article reports on injuries of the cervical spine occurring during sports activities. An attempt is made to reconstruct the movements which led to the cervical spine injuries in question. In two cases of accidents occuring during bathing, one football accident and a toboggan accident, the injuries concerned point to hyperextension of the cervical spine as cause of the injury. In another football accident and a riding accident, the changes observed allow us to conclude that the movement leading to the injury must have been a hyperflexion. One accident occurring while jumping on the trampolin resulted in an injury of the upper cervical spine pointing to the action of a compressive force on the cervical spine in addition to the force resulting in hyperflexion.
Authors:
Publication Date:
Mar 01, 1981
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
EDB-82-042666
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Roentgen Bl.; (Germany, Federal Republic of); Journal Volume: 34:3
Subject:
62 RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE; INJURIES; DIAGNOSIS; NECK; VERTEBRAE; BIOMEDICAL RADIOGRAPHY; ACCIDENTS; BONE FRACTURES; PATIENTS; X-RAY EQUIPMENT; BODY; BODY AREAS; DIAGNOSTIC TECHNIQUES; EQUIPMENT; MEDICINE; NUCLEAR MEDICINE; ORGANS; RADIOLOGY; SKELETON; 550602* - Medicine- External Radiation in Diagnostics- (1980-)
OSTI ID:
5713088
Country of Origin:
Germany
Language:
German
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: CODEN: ROBLA
Submitting Site:
DE
Size:
Pages: 81-85
Announcement Date:
Nov 01, 1981

Citation Formats

Bargon, G. Sport injuries of the cervical spine. Germany: N. p., 1981. Web.
Bargon, G. Sport injuries of the cervical spine. Germany.
Bargon, G. 1981. "Sport injuries of the cervical spine." Germany.
@misc{etde_5713088,
title = {Sport injuries of the cervical spine}
author = {Bargon, G}
abstractNote = {The article reports on injuries of the cervical spine occurring during sports activities. An attempt is made to reconstruct the movements which led to the cervical spine injuries in question. In two cases of accidents occuring during bathing, one football accident and a toboggan accident, the injuries concerned point to hyperextension of the cervical spine as cause of the injury. In another football accident and a riding accident, the changes observed allow us to conclude that the movement leading to the injury must have been a hyperflexion. One accident occurring while jumping on the trampolin resulted in an injury of the upper cervical spine pointing to the action of a compressive force on the cervical spine in addition to the force resulting in hyperflexion.}
journal = []
volume = {34:3}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Germany}
year = {1981}
month = {Mar}
}