Skull X-ray after head injury: the recommendations of the Royal College of Surgeons Working Party report in practice.

R E MacLaren, H I Ghoorahoo, N G Kirby
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

In 1986 a Royal College of Surgeons Working Party published guidelines, based on over 15 years of clinical research both here and in the U.S.A., on when to perform skull X-rays on a head injury patient. In this retrospective study the recorded details of 405 patients who presented to an accident and emergency (A&E) department over a 3-month period in 1991 are analysed, and the Report criteria applied to each one to assess whether the guidelines are being followed in performing a skull X-ray. According to these guidelines, 191 of these patients (47.2%) should have been X-rayed, however, only 83 were. Only one patient was thought to have been X-rayed inappropriately. The Report criteria most commonly thought by the A&E doctors not to warrant skull X-ray, were loss of consciousness, amnesia, dizziness, blurred vision, headache, and alcohol intoxication. The reasons why these criteria are being ignored are examined, and together with reference to recent studies, slight alterations to the Working Party guidelines are suggested to make them more applicable to everyday situations of head injury encountered in a casualty department.

颅脑损伤后颅骨x线检查:英国皇家外科学会工作小组报告在实践中的建议。
1986年,英国皇家外科医学院工作组根据英国和美国超过15年的临床研究,发布了关于何时对头部受伤患者进行颅骨x光检查的指导方针。在这项回顾性研究中,我们分析了1991年3个月期间就诊于急诊(A&E)部门的405例患者的详细记录,并将报告标准应用于每个患者,以评估在进行颅骨x光检查时是否遵循了指南。根据这些指南,191例患者(47.2%)应该进行x光检查,然而只有83例患者进行了x光检查。只有一名患者被认为进行了不适当的x光检查。报告中最常被急诊室医生认为不需要进行颅骨x光检查的标准是意识丧失、失忆、头晕、视力模糊、头痛和酒精中毒。审查了这些标准被忽视的原因,并参考了最近的研究,建议对工作组准则进行轻微修改,使其更适用于伤病科遇到的日常头部损伤情况。
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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