J Trauma
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Decompressive craniectomy for diffuse cerebral swelling after trauma: long-term outcome and ethical considerations.
There is currently much interest in the use of decompressive for the management of diffuse cerebral swelling after trauma. Although the use of the procedure may improve survival, some of those survivors may be left severely disabled. The aim of this study was to see whether severe disability can be predicted and discuss the difficult ethical issue that this raises. ⋯ Our data provide some evidence that the CRASH prediction model may help clinicians and families to make informed decision about the benefits and risks of decompressive craniectomy for diffuse cerebral swelling.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Virtual reality pain control during burn wound debridement of combat-related burn injuries using robot-like arm mounted VR goggles.
This is the first controlled study to explore whether adjunctive immersive virtual reality (VR) can reduce excessive pain of soldiers with combat-related burn injuries during wound debridement. ⋯ These preliminary results provide the first evidence from a controlled study that adjunctive immersive VR reduced pain of patients with combat-related burn injuries during severe burn wound debridement. Pain reduction during VR was greatest in patients with the highest pain during no VR. These patients were the first to use a unique custom robot-like arm mounted VR goggle system.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Recombinant activated factor VII safety in trauma patients: results from the CONTROL trial.
Safety data on recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa, NovoSeven; Novo Nordisk A/S, Bagsværd, Denmark) in actively hemorrhaging trauma patients are limited. We present detailed safety data from a large multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled phase III study (the CONTROL trial). ⋯ This represents the largest placebo-controlled dataset of rFVIIa use in trauma patients to date. In this prospective study of critically bleeding trauma patients, rFVIIa use was associated with an imbalance of investigator-reported Acute myocardial infarction/non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (AMI/NSTEMI), but was not associated with an increased risk for other AEs, including TE complications.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Brief violence interventions with community case management services are effective for high-risk trauma patients.
Currently there are few data that brief violence intervention (BVI) and community case management services (CCMS) are effective for trauma patients admitted for interpersonal violence in terms of recidivism, service utilization, or alcohol abuse. The objective of this study is to assess outcomes for a cohort of young trauma patients in a prospective, randomized trial comparing BVI with BVI + CCMS. ⋯ In-hospital BVI with community wraparound case management interventions can improve hospital and community service utilization both short- and long-term for high-risk injured patients. Longer follow-up is needed to show sustained reduction.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Airway scope laryngoscopy under manual inline stabilization and cervical collar immobilization: a crossover in vivo cinefluoroscopic study.
Direct laryngoscopy along with manual inline stabilization (MIS) is currently the standard care for patients with suspected neck injuries. However, cervical collar immobilization is more commonly performed in the prehospital environment, and its early removal is necessary before intubation. We hypothesized that if usability of Airway Scope (AWS) in a difficult airway could also bring merits to intubation under cervical collar immobilization, unnecessary risk caused by the removal of a neck collar may be prevented. ⋯ When compared with cervical collar immobilization, AWS laryngoscopy along with MIS seems to be a safer and more definite method to secure airway of neck-injured trauma patients because it limits less mouth opening and upper cervical spine movement.