• Injury · Sep 2014

    Necessity of monitoring after negative head CT in acute head injury.

    • Harri Isokuortti, Teemu M Luoto, Anneli Kataja, Antti Brander, Jari Siironen, Suvi Liimatainen, Grant L Iverson, Aarne Ylinen, and Juha Ohman.
    • Department of Neurological Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. Electronic address: harri.isokuortti@helsinki.fi.
    • Injury. 2014 Sep 1; 45 (9): 1340-4.

    ObjectiveThe main objective of this study was to evaluate the incidence of delayed complications in acute head injury (HI) patients with an initial normal head computed tomography (CT).Materials And MethodsThis retrospective study included 3023 consecutive patients who underwent head CT due to an acute HI at the Emergency Department (ED) of Tampere University Hospital (August 2010-July 2012). Regardless of clinical injury severity, the patients with a normal head CT were selected (n=2444, 80.9%). The medical records of these patients were reviewed to identify the individuals with a serious clinically significant complication related to the primary HI. The time window considered was the following 72h after the primary head CT. A repeated head CT in the hospital ward, death, or return to the ED were indicative of a possible complication.ResultsThe majority (n=1811, 74.1%) of the patients with a negative head CT were discharged home and 1.1% (n=27) of these patients returned to ED within 72h post-CT. A repeated head CT was performed on 12 (44.4%) of the returned patients and none of the scans revealed an acute lesion. Of the 632 (25.9%) CT-negative patients admitted to the hospital ward from the ED, a head CT was repeated in 46 (7.3%) patients within 72h as part of routine practice. In the repeated CT sample, only one (0.2%) patient had a traumatic intracranial lesion. This lesion did not need neurosurgical intervention. The overall complication rate was 0.04%.ConclusionIn the present study, which includes head injuries of all severity, the probability of delayed life-threatening complications was negligible when the primary CT scan revealed no acute traumatic lesions.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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