Haddon Pantel1, Kristian D Stensland2, Jeffrey Hashim3, Michael Rosenblatt4. 1. Department of General Surgery, Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, MA, USA. haddon.pantel@lahey.org. 2. Department of Urology, Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, MA, USA. 3. Department of Radiology, Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, MA, USA. 4. Department of General Surgery, Lahey Hospital and Medical Center, Burlington, MA, USA.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to identify factors at the time of presentation which could quickly exclude or identify renal dysfunction in blunt trauma patients, thus negating serum measurement of renal function prior to contrast-enhanced imaging and expediting care. METHODS: Patients, >18 years old, without renal failure, presenting after blunt trauma, with serum creatinine measured at presentation, were retrospectively studied at a single center. Variables recorded at presentation including vitals, mechanism, and past medical history were analyzed using multivariate regression analysis to identify independent predictors of abnormal renal function. RESULTS: From 2009 to 2015, a total of 1099 patients met the inclusion criteria. Of those, 75 (6.8%) had renal dysfunction at presentation. Patients with renal dysfunction had a mean age of 74.3 (SD 15.5) years old, and 57.3% were male. Multivariate analysis identified independent predictors of renal dysfunction at presentation as age ≥ 61 (p < 0.001), hypotension (p = 0.02), and diabetes (p = 0.02). The presence of a single identified factor had an 85% sensitivity for renal dysfunction and a 98.5% negative predictive value. CONCLUSIONS: Impaired renal function at presentation was infrequent in our trauma cohort. Trauma patients who were normotensive, under the age of 61, and without diabetes were unlikely to have impaired renal function at presentation. In the urgent setting of trauma, patients without these comorbidities are likely safe to forgo screening of renal function prior to contrast-enhanced imaging.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to identify factors at the time of presentation which could quickly exclude or identify renal dysfunction in blunt traumapatients, thus negating serum measurement of renal function prior to contrast-enhanced imaging and expediting care. METHODS:Patients, >18 years old, without renal failure, presenting after blunt trauma, with serum creatinine measured at presentation, were retrospectively studied at a single center. Variables recorded at presentation including vitals, mechanism, and past medical history were analyzed using multivariate regression analysis to identify independent predictors of abnormal renal function. RESULTS: From 2009 to 2015, a total of 1099 patients met the inclusion criteria. Of those, 75 (6.8%) had renal dysfunction at presentation. Patients with renal dysfunction had a mean age of 74.3 (SD 15.5) years old, and 57.3% were male. Multivariate analysis identified independent predictors of renal dysfunction at presentation as age ≥ 61 (p < 0.001), hypotension (p = 0.02), and diabetes (p = 0.02). The presence of a single identified factor had an 85% sensitivity for renal dysfunction and a 98.5% negative predictive value. CONCLUSIONS:Impaired renal function at presentation was infrequent in our trauma cohort. Traumapatients who were normotensive, under the age of 61, and without diabetes were unlikely to have impaired renal function at presentation. In the urgent setting of trauma, patients without these comorbidities are likely safe to forgo screening of renal function prior to contrast-enhanced imaging.
Authors: Edward A McGillicuddy; Kevin M Schuster; Lewis J Kaplan; Adrian A Maung; Felix Y Lui; Linda L Maerz; Dirk C Johnson; Kimberly A Davis Journal: J Trauma Date: 2010-02
Authors: Brian R Herts; Erika Schneider; Nancy Obuchowski; Emilio Poggio; Anil Jain; Mark E Baker Journal: AJR Am J Roentgenol Date: 2009-08 Impact factor: 3.959
Authors: Kristin P Colling; Eric D Irwin; Matthew C Byrnes; Patricia Reicks; Wendy A Dellich; Kyle Reicks; Jonathan Gipson; Greg J Beilman Journal: J Trauma Acute Care Surg Date: 2014-08 Impact factor: 3.313
Authors: Robert J McDonald; Jennifer S McDonald; Rickey E Carter; Robert P Hartman; Richard W Katzberg; David F Kallmes; Eric E Williamson Journal: Radiology Date: 2014-09-09 Impact factor: 11.105
Authors: Matthew S Davenport; Shokoufeh Khalatbari; Richard H Cohan; Jonathan R Dillman; James D Myles; James H Ellis Journal: Radiology Date: 2013-04-11 Impact factor: 11.105