Spine Injury: Lumbar
Basics
Description
- Major spinal injuries:
- Wedge compression:
- Involves anterior half of the vertebra
- If <50% anterior compression of the vertebral body, injury considered stable
- No ligamentous injury
- No neurologic deficit
- Burst fracture:
- Involvement of the entire body under axial load
- Vertebral body fracture may be displaced posteriorly into the neural canal
- Kyphosis may be seen on lateral radiograph
- Posterior ligamentous injury
- Associated pelvic, lower extremities, and calcaneal fractures
- Possible neurologic deficit
- Chance fracture (seat belt injury):
- Abdominal injuries commonly associated
- Type I is a pure bony injury; fracture line through spinous process, pedicles, and vertebral body
- No kyphosis evident on lateral radiograph
- Often no neurologic deficit
- Fracture dislocations:
- Anterior, posterior, or lateral translation of superior vertebral segment over the inferior segment
- Mostly soft tissue injury; no fracture
- Complete disruption of posterior ligaments and intervertebral disc
- Neurologic deficit present
- Wedge compression:
- Simple or minor spinal fractures:
- Isolated spinous process fracture:
- Ligamentous disruption
- No neurologic deficit
- Isolated transverse process fracture:
- Ligamentous disruption
- Neurologic deficit possible; rare isolated root injury
- Articular process fracture:
- No neurologic deficit
- May be instable if multiple or displaced
- Isolated spinous process fracture:
Etiology
- Motor vehicle accidents (MVA)
- Fall from height landing on the feet (associated calcaneal fractures) or on the buttocks
- Blunt trauma with axial distraction, axial compression, or translational forces applied to lumbar region
- Penetrating injury: primary gunshot wound
- Sport related injury
Pediatric Considerations
- Rare reports of child abuse presenting as lower extremity flaccid paralysis owing to lumbar spine fracture
- Spinal cord terminates at L3 in newborn and recedes to L1 by adulthood; direct cord damage possible in children with high lumbar fractures
- End plate avulsion fractures: Adolescent injury usually at L4–L5 or L5–S1 level; ligament pulls off vertebral body end plate; associated neurologic findings
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Citation
Schaider, Jeffrey J., et al., editors. "Spine Injury: Lumbar." 5-Minute Emergency Consult, 7th ed., Wolters Kluwer, 2027. Emergency Central, emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307306/4/Spine_Injury:_Lumbar_.
Spine Injury: Lumbar. In: Schaider JJJ, Barkin RMR, Hayden SRS, et al, eds. 5-Minute Emergency Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2027. https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307306/4/Spine_Injury:_Lumbar_. Accessed July 19, 2026.
Spine Injury: Lumbar. (2027). In Schaider, J. J., Barkin, R. M., Hayden, S. R., Wolfe, R. E., Barkin, A. Z., Shayne, P., & Rosen, P. (Eds.), 5-Minute Emergency Consult (7th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307306/4/Spine_Injury:_Lumbar_
Spine Injury: Lumbar [Internet]. In: Schaider JJJ, Barkin RMR, Hayden SRS, et al, eds. 5-Minute Emergency Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2027. [cited 2026 July 19]. Available from: https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307306/4/Spine_Injury:_Lumbar_.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
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T1 - Spine Injury: Lumbar
ID - 307306
ED - Barkin,Adam Z,
ED - Shayne,Philip,
ED - Rosen,Peter,
ED - Schaider,Jeffrey J,
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ED - Hayden,Stephen R,
ED - Wolfe,Richard E,
BT - 5-Minute Emergency Consult
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5-Minute Emergency Consult

