| Literature DB >> 29550926 |
Tomas Vedin1, Sebastian Svensson2, Marcus Edelhamre2, Mathias Karlsson3, Mikael Bergenheim4, Per-Anders Larsson2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Head trauma is common in the emergency department. Identifying the few patients with serious injuries is time consuming and leads to many computerized tomographies (CTs). Reducing the number of CTs would reduce cost and radiation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the characteristics of adults with head trauma over a 1-year period to identify clinical features predicting intracranial hemorrhage.Entities:
Keywords: Brain injuries; Epidemiology; Intracranial hemorrhage; Practice guidelines as topic; S100B Calcium Binding Protein Beta Subunit; Traumatic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29550926 PMCID: PMC6791960 DOI: 10.1007/s00068-018-0941-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg ISSN: 1863-9933 Impact factor: 3.693
Fig. 1Age distribution in patients with head trauma
Regression analysis of potential parameters predicting intracranial hemorrhage
| Parameter | p-value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate regression | Multivariate regression 1 | Multivariate Regression 2 | |
| Age | < | < | < |
| Gender |
|
| 0.091 |
| Degree of head injury | < | < | < |
| Level of consciousness (RLS) |
| 0.469 | n/a** |
| Past illness |
| 0.792 | n/a** |
| Anticoagulation treatment |
| 0.214 | n/a** |
| Platelet inhibitor | < | 0.111 | n/a** |
| Current medication | 0.616 | n/a* | n/a** |
| Preexisting neurological deficits | 0.957 | n/a* | n/a** |
| New neurological deficits | < |
| < |
| Trauma energy level | < | < | < |
| Intoxication |
| 0.194 | n/a** |
Bold values indicate statistically significant
*Value is marked n/a when significance lever in the previous analysis was too low for inclusion in the next statistical analysis (p < 0.4)
**Value is marked n/a when significance lever in the previous analysis was too low for inclusion in the next statistical analysis (p < 0.05)
Age, energy level, and frequency of intracranial hemorrhage
| Age (years)* | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–39 | 40–58 | 59–79 | 80–101 | ||
| Energy level | |||||
| Low | 0/328 | 0/251 | 16/349 | 27/323 | 1251 |
| Medium | 0/47 | 3/28 | 5/17 | 2/2 | 94 |
| High | 2/11 | 1/3 | 0/0 | 2/2 | 16 |
| n/a | 1/93 | 1/65 | 5/75 | 5/44 | 277 |
| 3/479 (0.6%) | 5/347 (1.4%) | 26/441 (5.9%) | 36/371 (9.7%) | 70 | |
*Group cutoffs were selected at middle age (40 years), first occurrence of intracranial hemorrhage in low-energy trauma group (59 years), and age when intracranial hemorrhages are much more common (80 years)
Intracranial hemorrhage, age, and gender
| Gender and age | Hemorrhages | Energy of trauma | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Medium | High | n/a | ||
| Male ( | 45 | 26 | 9 | 2 | 8 |
| Mean age [years (± SD)] | 74 (± 12.96) | 79 (± 10.16) | 69 (± 10.54) | 67 (± 18.38) | 67 (± 15.53) |
| Female ( | 25 | 17 | 1 | 2 | 5 |
| Mean age [years (± SD)] | 77 (± 19,21) | 82 (± 10.7) | 45 | 58,5 (± 30.41) | 73 (± 31.56) |
S100b levels and intracranial hemorrhage
| s100b Level | Intracranial hemorrhage | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | |
| > 0.1 umol/l | 7 | 102 |
| < 0.1 umol/l | 1 | 87 |
| Not measured | 62 | 1379 |