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The American surgeon · Oct 2009
Evaluation of prehospital and emergency department systolic blood pressure as a predictor of in-hospital mortality.
- Fariborz Lalezarzadeh, Paul Wisniewski, Katie Huynh, Maria Loza, and Dev Gnanadev.
- Department of General Surgery, Arrowhead Regional Medical Center, 400 N. Pepper, Colton, CA, USA. flalezar@yahoo.com
- Am Surg. 2009 Oct 1;75(10):1009-14.
AbstractHypotension is a trauma activation criterion validated by multiple studies. However, field systolic blood pressures (SBP) are still met with skepticism. How significant is the role of prehospital (PH) and emergency department (ED) SBP in the patient's overall condition? A review of the trauma registry over a 5-year period was conducted. PH SBPs were stratified into four categories: severe (SBP 80 mmHg or less), moderate (81-100 mmHg), mild hypotension (101-120 mmHg), and normotension (greater than 120 mmHg). These four groups were further subcategorized into the patients who were hypotensive, SBP 90 mmHg or less in the ED, versus those that were not (SBP greater than 90 mmHg). Data for 6964 patients were analyzed. Patients with PH SBP of 80 mmHg or less compared with patients who had PH SBP of greater than 80 mmHg had higher mortality (OR, 9; 95% CI, 6.45-12.84). Patients with both PH SBP 80 mmHg or less and ED SBP 90 mmHg or less had the highest risk of mortality (50%) and highest need for emergent operative intervention (54%). PH and ED hypotension is a strong predictor of in-hospital mortality and need for emergent surgical intervention in trauma patients. Field or ED blood pressures should serve as a significant marker of the patient's condition.
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