THE ROLE OF SECONDARY BRAIN INJURY IN DETERMINING OUTCOME FROM SEVERE HEAD-INJURY

被引:1445
作者
CHESNUT, RM
MARSHALL, LF
KLAUBER, MR
BLUNT, BA
BALDWIN, N
EISENBERG, HM
JANE, JA
MARMAROU, A
FOULKES, MA
机构
[1] SAN DIEGO VET ADM HOSP,DIV NEUROL SURG,LA JOLLA,CA
[2] UCSD,MED CTR,DEPT COMMUNITY & FAMILY MED,SAN DIEGO,CA
[3] VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIV,MED COLL VIRGINIA,RICHMOND,VA 23298
[4] UNIV TEXAS,MED BRANCH,GALVESTON,TX 77550
[5] UNIV VIRGINIA,MED CTR,SCH MED,CHARLOTTESVILLE,VA 22901
[6] NINCDS,BETHESDA,MD 20892
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00005373-199302000-00006
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
As triage and resuscitation protocols evolve, it is critical to determine the major extracranial variables influencing outcome in the setting of severe head injury. We prospectively studied the outcome from severe head injury (GCS score less-than-or-equal-to 8) in 717 cases in the Traumatic Coma Data Bank. We investigated the impact on outcome of hypotension (SBP < 90 mm Hg) and hypoxia (PaO2 less-than-or-equal-to 60 mm Hg or apnea or cyanosis in the field) as secondary brain insults, occurring from injury through resuscitation. Hypoxia and hypotension were independently associated with significant increases in morbidity and mortality from severe head injury. Hypotension was profoundly detrimental, occurring in 34.6% of these patients and associated with a 150% increase in mortality. The increased morbidity and mortality related to severe trauma to an extracranial organ system appeared primarily attributable to associated hypotension. Improvements in trauma care delivery over the past decade have not markedly altered the adverse influence of hypotension. Hypoxia and hypotension are common and detrimental secondary brain insults. Hypotension, particularly, is a major determinant of outcome from severe head injury. Resuscitation protocols for brain injured patients should assiduously avoid hypovolemic shock on an absolute basis.
引用
收藏
页码:216 / 222
页数:7
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