An epidemiological study of traumatic spinal cord injuries in the fastest aging area in Japan

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Abstract

Study design: Retrospective epidemiological study. Objective: To investigate the epidemiology of traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) in the fastest aging area in Japan. Setting: Hospitals in Akita Prefecture, Japan. Akita Prefecture has the highest ratio of people aged 65 or older in Japan (30.4% in 2012 and 34.6% in 2016). Methods: Patients with acute TSCI who required hospital treatment between 2012 and 2016 were included. The incidence of TSCI, cause, level, skeletal injury, and Frankel grade were investigated. Results: The mean annual incidence of TSCI excluding Frankel E was 86 per million (range 86–104 per million) during the 5-year study period, with a mean age of 65.9 years (male, 75.1%) and patients in their 60s as the largest age group. Cervical injury was seen in 89.8%, and cervical TSCI without skeletal injury was seen in 65.5%. Frankel D was the most common neurological deficit (53.5%). The most common cause was falls on level surfaces (32.1%), followed by low falls (21.6%) and road traffic accidents (15.6%). Conclusions: Recent incidence and characteristics of TSCI in the fastest aging society in Japan are presented. The incidence of incomplete cervical TSCI and falls on level surfaces appear to be increasing.

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Kudo, D., Miyakoshi, N., Hongo, M., Kasukawa, Y., Ishikawa, Y., Ishikawa, N., & Shimada, Y. (2019). An epidemiological study of traumatic spinal cord injuries in the fastest aging area in Japan. Spinal Cord, 57(6), 509–515. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41393-019-0255-7

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