In September 2022, the Journal of Orthopaedic Case Reports highlighted a tragic incident involving an 18-year-old male worker in India who suffered a catastrophic cervical spine injury after a heavy metallic object fell directly on the front of his head at work. The impact caused a retropulsion fracture of the C5 vertebral body, accompanied by a C6 fracture. Despite emergency care, the young man passed away two days later. This case is particularly significant because it represents the first documented instance of this specific injury pattern, which does not fit into existing spinal injury classification systems.
The incident occurred suddenly while the worker was standing in his workplace, when a large metallic pipe or beam unexpectedly fell and struck the front of his head. He lost consciousness immediately, fell into respiratory distress, and went into shock. Emergency responders performed rapid intubation, applied a rigid cervical collar, and transferred him to the hospital, where he received intensive stabilization efforts.
Medical imaging, including non-contrast computed tomography of the cervical spine, revealed a rare and severe injury: the C5 vertebral body had collapsed backward into the spinal canal without displacement of facet joints or pedicles, while the superior posterior portion of C6 also fractured. This axial flexion-compression injury—akin to a “nutcracker” effect—is exceptionally uncommon and has never been classified in widely used systems such as Allen & Ferguson, SLICS, or AO Spine, highlighting a gap in current spinal trauma classification.
Despite immediate medical intervention, including cervical traction, ventilatory support, and attempts at stabilization, the patient’s condition deteriorated rapidly. The severe canal compromise and physiological instability limited surgical options, and tragically, he died within 48 hours of the incident. The case underscores how even a single, moderately heavy object falling from a limited height can generate enough axial force to cause devastating cervical spine injuries.
This case also emphasizes broader clinical and safety implications. Retropulsion injuries can directly compress the spinal cord, leading to rapid neurologic deterioration, paralysis, or loss of respiratory control. It highlights the limitations of current classification systems in addressing atypical injury patterns and stresses the importance of preventive workplace measures, strict safety protocols, and awareness of rare but fatal injury mechanisms in occupational settings.READ MORE BELOW..