Literature DB >> 23219241

Physiologic, demographic and mechanistic factors predicting New Injury Severity Score (NISS) in motor vehicle accident victims.

T Staff1, T Eken, L Wik, J Røislien, S Søvik.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current literature on motor vehicle accidents (MVAs) has few reports regarding field factors that predict the degree of injury. Also, studies of mechanistic factors rarely consider concurrent predictive effects of on-scene patient physiology. The New Injury Severity Score (NISS) has previously been found to correlate with mortality, need for ICU admission, length of hospital stay, and functional recovery after trauma. To potentially increase future precision of trauma triage, we assessed how the NISS is associated with physiologic, demographic and mechanistic variables from the accident site.
METHODS: Using mixed-model linear regression analyses, we explored the association between NISS and pre-hospital Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score, Revised Trauma Score (RTS) categories of respiratory rate (RR) and systolic blood pressure (SBP), gender, age, subject position in the vehicle, seatbelt use, airbag deployment, and the estimated squared change in vehicle velocity on impact ((Δv)(2)). Missing values were handled with multiple imputation.
RESULTS: We included 190 accidents with 353 dead or injured subjects (mean NISS 17, median NISS 8, IQR 1-27). For the 307 subjects in front-impact MVAs, the mean increase in NISS was -2.58 per GCS point, -2.52 per RR category level, -2.77 per SBP category level, -1.08 for male gender, 0.18 per year of age, 4.98 for driver vs. rear passengers, 4.83 for no seatbelt use, 13.52 for indeterminable seatbelt use, 5.07 for no airbag deployment, and 0.0003 per (km/h)(2) velocity change (all p<0.002).
CONCLUSION: This study in victims of MVAs demonstrated that injury severity (NISS) was concurrently and independently predicted by poor pre-hospital physiologic status, increasing age and female gender, and several mechanistic measures of localised and generalised trauma energy. Our findings underscore the need for precise information from the site of trauma, to reduce undertriage, target diagnostic efforts, and anticipate need for high-level care and rehabilitative resources.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abbreviated Injury Scale; Airbags; Glasgow Coma Scale, Blood pressure, Respiratory rate; Prehospital emergency care; Revised Trauma Score; Seatbelt; Traffic accident; Triage

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23219241     DOI: 10.1016/j.injury.2012.11.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Injury        ISSN: 0020-1383            Impact factor:   2.586


  8 in total

1.  Delayed endovascular aortic repair is associated with reduced in-hospital mortality in patients with blunt thoracic aortic injury.

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2.  Accuracy of SOFA score in prediction of 30-day outcome of critically ill patients.

Authors:  Saeed Safari; Majid Shojaee; Farhad Rahmati; Alireza Barartloo; Behrooz Hahshemi; Mohammad Mehdi Forouzanfar; Elham Mohammadi
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3.  Comparison of APACHE II and SAPS II Scoring Systems in Prediction of Critically Ill Patients' Outcome.

Authors:  Hamed Aminiahidashti; Farzad Bozorgi; Seyyed Hosein Montazer; Majid Baboli; Abolfazl Firouzian
Journal:  Emerg (Tehran)       Date:  2017-01-08

4.  Glasgow Coma Scale and FOUR Score in Predicting the Mortality of Trauma Patients; a Diagnostic Accuracy Study.

Authors:  Parisa Ghelichkhani; Maryam Esmaeili; Mostafa Hosseini; Khatereh Seylani
Journal:  Emerg (Tehran)       Date:  2018-07-14

5.  Predictors of Acute Mortality After Open Pelvic Fracture: Experience From 37 Patients From A Level I Trauma Center.

Authors:  I-Chuan Tseng; I-Jung Chen; Ying-Chao Chou; Yung-Heng Hsu; Yi-Hsun Yu
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Review 6.  The Value of Physiological Scoring Criteria in Predicting the In-Hospital Mortality of Acute Patients; a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Amirmohammad Toloui; Arian Madani Neishaboori; Seyedeh Niloufar Rafiei Alavi; Mohammed I M Gubari; Amirali Zareie Shab Khaneh; Maryam Karimi Ghahfarokhi; Fatemeh Amraei; Zahra Behroozi; Mostafa Hosseini; Sajjad Ahmadi; Mahmoud Yousefifard
Journal:  Arch Acad Emerg Med       Date:  2021-09-09

7.  How to prevent early mortality due to spinal cord injuries? New evidence & update.

Authors:  Ellen Merete Hagen
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 2.375

8.  Rapid Acute Physiology Score versus Rapid Emergency Medicine Score in Trauma Outcome Prediction; a Comparative Study.

Authors:  Babak Nakhjavan-Shahraki; Masoud Baikpour; Mahmoud Yousefifard; Zahra Sadat Nikseresht; Samaneh Abiri; Jalaledin Mirzay Razaz; Gholamreza Faridaalaee; Mahboob Pouraghae; Sahar Shirzadegan; Mostafa Hosseini
Journal:  Emerg (Tehran)       Date:  2017-01-10
  8 in total

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