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Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo) · Sep 2018
Observational StudyOutcomes after Traumatic Brain Injury with Concomitant Severe Extracranial Injuries.
- Tomoo Watanabe, Yasuyuki Kawai, Asami Iwamura, Naoki Maegawa, Hidetada Fukushima, and Kazuo Okuchi.
- Department of Emergency and Critical Care, Nara Medical University.
- Neurol. Med. Chir. (Tokyo). 2018 Sep 15; 58 (9): 393-399.
AbstractTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of death and disability in trauma patients. Patients with TBI frequently sustain concomitant injuries in extracranial regions. The effect of severe extracranial injury (SEI) on the outcome of TBI is controversial. For 8 years, we retrospectively enrolled 485 patients with the blunt head injury with head abbreviated injury scale (AIS) ≧ 3. SEI was defined as AIS ≧ 3 injuries in the face, chest, abdomen, and pelvis/extremities. Vital signs and coagulation parameter values were also extracted from the database. Total patients were dichotomized into isolated TBI (n = 343) and TBI associated with SEI (n = 142). The differences in severity and outcome between these two groups were analyzed. To assess the relation between outcome and any variables showing significant differences in univariate analysis, we included the parameters in univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses. Mortality was 17.8% in the isolated TBI group and 21.8% in TBI with SEI group (P = 0.38), but the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) in the TBI with SEI group was unfavorable compared to the isolated TBI group (P = 0.002). Patients with SBP ≦ 90 mmHg were frequent in the TBI with SEI group. Adjusting for age, GCS, and length of hospital stay, SEI was a strong prognostic factor for mortality with adjusted ORs of 2.30. Hypotension and coagulopathy caused by SEI are considerable factors underlying the secondary insults to TBI. It is important to manage not only the brain but the whole body in the treatment of TBI patients with SEI.
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