Literature DB >> 6647549

Severe head injury. Clinical assessment and outcome.

J S Heiden, R Small, W Caton, M Weiss, T Kurze.   

Abstract

A prospective study of 213 patients with severe head injury and Glasgow Coma Scores of 8 or less was conducted to identify, at 24 hours postinjury, the favorable and unfavorable clinical factors that relate to outcome one year later. According to the Glasgow Outcome Scale, 35 percent were classified Moderate Disability or Good Recovery, 13 percent were classified Severe Disability or Vegetative State, and 52 percent had died. The presence of intact brain-stem reflexes 24 hours postinjury in comatose patients with head injury is a prognostic sign for a good recovery. Favorable clinical signs include eye opening, pupillary reactivity, spontaneous eye movement, intact oculovestibular reflexes, and motor responses such as localizing. A prognosis of poor recovery is associated with nonreactive pupils, absent oculovestibular reflexes, and motor response of extension or no response at all. These negative signs, when present individually, were associated with only a 3 to 4 percent Moderate Disability or Good Recovery rate and an 85 to 91 percent mortality rate. The Glasgow Outcome Scale was also used to define recovery patterns at intervals during the first year after injury. Ninety percent of patients reached their highest outcome category by six months. The most frequent one-month outcome category for survivors was Severe Disability. By six months postinjury, 68 percent of these patients had made sufficient neurological progress to change their classification to Moderate Disability or Good Recovery. The 16 percent of patients classified at one month as in a persistently Vegetative State had a prognosis of poor outcome. Only 28 percent of these patients progressed in one year to the Severe Disability classification.

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Mesh:

Year:  1983        PMID: 6647549     DOI: 10.1093/ptj/63.12.1946

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Ther        ISSN: 0031-9023


  3 in total

1.  Recovery of patients after four months or more in the persistent vegetative state.

Authors:  K Andrews
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1993-06-12

2.  The Feasibility of Telephone-Administered Cognitive Testing in Individuals 1 and 2 Years after Inpatient Rehabilitation for Traumatic Brain Injury.

Authors:  Kristen Dams-O'Connor; Karla Therese L Sy; Alexandra Landau; Yelena Bodien; Sureyya Dikmen; Elizabeth R Felix; Joseph T Giacino; Laura Gibbons; Flora M Hammond; Tessa Hart; Doug Johnson-Greene; Jeannie Lengenfelder; Anthony Lequerica; Jody Newman; Thomas Novack; Therese M O'Neil-Pirozzi; Gale Whiteneck
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2018-03-13       Impact factor: 5.269

3.  Single photon emission computed tomography scanning: A predictor of outcome in vegetative state of head injury.

Authors:  Pralaya Nayak; Ashok K Mahapatra
Journal:  J Neurosci Rural Pract       Date:  2011-01
  3 in total

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