Sign in or 

The cervical spine is one of the mainstays of trauma radiography. The lateral cervical spine view is usually a routine view in patients with severe trauma. The emphasis on clearing the cervical spine in major trauma patients reflects the importance of not missing cervical spine injuries. This page look at soft tissue signs of cervical spine trauma.
| | The retropharyngeal/preveretbral soft tissues can provide signs of cervical spine injury. This image demonstrates normal preveretbral soft tissues Two assessments of prevertebral cervical spine soft tissues are commonly made. C2 (black arrows)These criteria are guides only. Various studies have suggested alternative guidelines and any abnormal soft tissue findings should be interpreted in the context of bonyappearances, mechanism of injury and clinical signs.The prevertebral soft tissues at C2 should measure less than 7mm |
The assessment of the prevertebral cervical soft tissues can be impossible if the patient (particularly paediatric patients) is swallowing at the time of exposure.
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| Assessment of the upper cervical prevertebrtal soft tissues is not possible in this image. The patient is likely to have been swallowing at the time of exposure | The view was repeated with the patient breathing ythrough an open mouth. The upper prevertebal soft tissues are shown to be normal (arrows) |
| | This is an adult patient who was probably imaged mid swallow. The brevertebral soft tissues associoated with C! and C2 appear abnormally wide. This appearance is asscociated with the patient swallowing rather than any cervical injury. |
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| I was asked to repeat this AP cervical spine view by the referring doctor because of an apparent destructive bony process (arrowed). | The repeat image suggests that this is overlying air, probably in the pyriform fossa of the larynx |