Evaluation of older patients with minor blunt head trauma to identify those who do not have clinically important traumatic brain injury and can be safely managed without cranial computed tomography.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Emergency Medicine Australasia Pub Date : 2025-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-05 DOI:10.1111/1742-6723.14540
Tanya Mellett, Courtney West, Theophilus I Emeto, Jane Dutson, Angeline Khoo, Vinay Gangathimmaiah
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: Our primary aim was to identify a low-risk subgroup of older adults (aged 65 and older) presenting to ED with minor head trauma which can be safely managed without a cranial CT (cCT).

Methods: This was a single-site, prospective, observational, cohort study conducted at a major-referral ED. Alert, haemodynamically stable, older adults with suspected head trauma were eligible. This included both community dwellers and residential aged care facility (RACF) residents. Primary outcome was the proportion of patients who had a clinically important traumatic brain injury (ciTBI) within 42 days of index ED presentation. Secondary outcomes included proportion investigated with a cCT, and proportion needing neurosurgical intervention.

Results: Two hundred seventy-six patients (mean age 80.5 years; 53.6% female) were enrolled. The most common mechanism of injury was ground-level fall (93.8%). One in four patients was from RACFs, 30.1% had dementia and 52.2% were on blood thinners. 80.8% had a cCT during the index ED visit. Seven (2.5%) patients had ciTBI within 42 days of index ED presentation. Patients with ciTBI had either external signs of head injury or abnormal neurological exam. All patients with ciTBI were treated conservatively after shared decision-making.

Conclusions: Alert, haemodynamically stable, older ED adults with suspected head trauma had a low incidence of ciTBI in the present study. Abnormal physical examination findings were consistently present in patients with ciTBI. Shared decision-making prior to cCT may be the pragmatic way ahead in the management of this patient cohort, especially among those from RACFs.

评估轻度钝性头部创伤的老年患者,以确定那些没有临床上重要的创伤性脑损伤,并且可以在没有颅计算机断层扫描的情况下安全处理的患者。
目的:我们的主要目的是确定一个低风险的老年人亚组(65岁及以上)表现为ED的轻微头部创伤,可以在没有颅脑CT (cCT)的情况下安全处理。方法:这是一项在主要转诊急诊科进行的单地点、前瞻性、观察性队列研究。受试者为警惕、血流动力学稳定、疑似头部创伤的老年人。这包括社区居民和住宅老年护理机构(RACF)的居民。主要结局是在ED表现后42天内发生临床重要创伤性脑损伤(ciTBI)的患者比例。次要结果包括cCT调查的比例和需要神经外科干预的比例。结果:276例患者(平均年龄80.5岁;53.6%为女性)。最常见的损伤机制是地面坠落(93.8%)。四分之一的患者来自racf, 30.1%的患者患有痴呆症,52.2%的患者使用血液稀释剂。80.8%的患者在急诊期间接受了cCT检查。7例(2.5%)患者在ED表现后42天内发生了ciTBI。颅脑损伤患者有颅脑损伤的外部体征或神经系统检查异常。所有ciTBI患者在共同决策后均接受保守治疗。结论:在本研究中,警觉、血流动力学稳定、疑似头部创伤的老年ED成人发生ciTBI的几率较低。异常的体格检查结果在ciTBI患者中一致存在。在cCT前共同决策可能是这一患者队列管理的实用方法,特别是在来自racf的患者中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Emergency Medicine Australasia
Emergency Medicine Australasia 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
13.00%
发文量
217
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Emergency Medicine Australasia is the official journal of the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine (ACEM) and the Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine (ASEM), and publishes original articles dealing with all aspects of clinical practice, research, education and experiences in emergency medicine. Original articles are published under the following sections: Original Research, Paediatric Emergency Medicine, Disaster Medicine, Education and Training, Ethics, International Emergency Medicine, Management and Quality, Medicolegal Matters, Prehospital Care, Public Health, Rural and Remote Care, Technology, Toxicology and Trauma. Accepted papers become the copyright of the journal.
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