THE WESTMEAD HEAD-INJURY PROJECT OUTCOME IN SEVERE HEAD-INJURY - A COMPARATIVE-ANALYSIS OF PREHOSPITAL, CLINICAL AND CT VARIABLES

被引:246
作者
FEARNSIDE, MR [1 ]
COOK, RJ [1 ]
MCDOUGALL, P [1 ]
MCNEIL, RJ [1 ]
机构
[1] WESTMEAD HOSP,DEPT NEUROSURG,SYDNEY,AUSTRALIA
关键词
COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY; HEAD INJURY; INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE; OUTCOME; PROGNOSIS;
D O I
10.3109/02688699309023809
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
A prospective study of 315 consecutive patients with a severe head injury was undertaken to study factors contributing to mortality and morbidity, both in the pre-hospital and hospital phases. Entry criteria were a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score of 8 or less after non-surgical resuscitation within 6 h of the injury, or a deterioration to that level within 48 h. Patients with gunshot wounds or who were dead on arrival were excluded. End points of the study were either death or at 6 months after the injury. Predictors of mortality were increasing age, the presence of hypotension, a low GCS, abnormal motor responses and pupillary non-reactivity. In the 167 patients in whom intracranial pressure (ICP) was measured, raised ICP and failure to respond to treatment for raised ICP also predicted mortality. Three CT predictors of mortality were the presence of cerebral oedema, intraventricular blood and the degree of midline shift. When analysed using logistic regression, the most accurate model (accuracy 84.4%) included increasing age, abnormal motor responses and the three CT indicators. Analysis of the data for 'good' (Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS) 1 and 2) vs 'poor' (GOS 3 and 4) survival at 6 months was also performed using logistic regression. The model which provided the most accurate prediction of poor outcome included age, hypotension and three different CT characteristics, subarachnoid blood, intracerebral haematoma or intracerebral contusion (accuracy 72.5%).
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收藏
页码:267 / 279
页数:13
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