| Literature DB >> 30872306 |
William Beedham1, George Peck2, Simon E Richardson3, Kevin Tsang2, Michael Fertleman2, David Jh Shipway4.
Abstract
Head injury is a common cause for hospital admission and additionally 250,000 UK inpatients fall during hospital admissions annually. Head injury most commonly occurs as a result of falls from standing height in older adults. Older adults are frequently frail and multi-morbid; many have indications for anticoagulation and antiplatelet agents. The haemorrhagic complications of head injury occur in up to 16% of anticoagulated patients sustaining a head injury. These patients suffer adverse outcomes from surgery as a result of medical complications. Although geriatric trauma models are evolving to meet the demand of an ageing trauma population, medical support to trauma services is commonly delivered by general physicians, many of whom lack experience and training in this field. Determining the role of surgery and interrupted anticoagulation requires careful personalised risk assessment. Appreciation of the opposing risks can be challenging; it requires an understanding of the evidence base in both surgery and medicine to rationalise decision making and inform communication. This article aims to provide an overview for the physician with clinical responsibility for patients who have sustained head injury. © Royal College of Physicians 2019. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Elderly; head injury; intracranial haemorrhage; subdural; trauma
Year: 2019 PMID: 30872306 PMCID: PMC6454360 DOI: 10.7861/clinmedicine.19-2-177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Med (Lond) ISSN: 1470-2118 Impact factor: 2.659