Upper Extremity Musculoskeletal Injuries Presenting to an Emergency Department Before and During the Initial COVID-19 Pandemic Surge.

IF 1.5 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Kayla E Prokopakis, Todd Bolotin, Chad Donley, Mark Lomasney, Jason Harter, Jack Graham, Quincy Chopra, Steven Olsen, Joseph Noga, Matthew Gatchel, Brendan Paull, Victoria Greyslak, Bret Bradford, Anna Plummer, Carrie Powell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Study objective: The SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic significantly impacted emergency department volume and acuity. The Delta and Omicron variants contributed to additional surges. We describe the impact that the initial pandemic phase had on frequency and severity of typically non-life-threatening emergencies using upper extremity injuries as a model for other potentially emergent presentation as compared to pre-pandemic times. We do this using the epidemiology of pre-defined significant upper extremity injuries at our facility as a specific example of what occurred at an urban trauma center.

Methods: We conducted a comparison of two 6-month periods: between March 2019 and August 2019 (prior to COVID-19) and between March 2020 and August 2020 after the onset of the initial COVID-19 wave. We performed a retrospective chart review of patients who presented with upper extremity injury chief complaints using analysis of the electronic medical record at a single urban tertiary care trauma center in the Midwestern United States. We investigated examination findings, imaging, frequency of surgical procedures and final diagnosis.

Results: In the 2019 study period, there were 31,157 ED patients, including 429 with upper extremity injuries, of which 108 patients had significant injuries. In the 2020 study period, there were 24,295 patient presentations, of which 118 of 296 upper extremity presentations were significant. We a priori defined significant injury as follows: fractures, dislocations, neurovascular injuries, or need for operative intervention within 24 hours of ED presentation. Specifically, 25.2% of injuries were significant pre-COVID-19 and 39.9% (p < 0.001) during the initial COVID-19 surge. The absolute number and percentage of significant injuries increased from pre-COVID-19 compared to the initial COVID-19 surge despite an overall 22% decrease in total patient volume.

Conclusion: The incidence of significant upper extremity musculoskeletal injuries increased during the pandemic even though the overall number of ED presentations for upper extremity musculoskeletal injuries decreased.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

在COVID-19大流行爆发之前和期间急诊科出现的上肢肌肉骨骼损伤
研究目的:SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19)大流行显著影响急诊科的业务量和敏锐度。Delta和Omicron变体带来了额外的激增。我们描述了大流行初期对通常不危及生命的紧急情况的频率和严重程度的影响,将上肢损伤作为与大流行前相比其他潜在紧急情况的模型。我们采用流行病学的方法,在我们的设施中预先定义明显的上肢损伤,作为城市创伤中心发生的具体例子。方法:我们对2019年3月至2019年8月(COVID-19之前)和2020年3月至2020年8月(最初的COVID-19波发病后)两个6个月的时间段进行了比较。我们对以上肢损伤为主诉的患者进行了回顾性图表回顾,分析了美国中西部一个城市三级创伤中心的电子病历。我们调查了检查结果、影像学、手术频率和最终诊断。结果:2019年研究期内,共有31,157例ED患者,其中上肢损伤429例,其中重度损伤108例。在2020年的研究期间,有24,295例患者就诊,其中296例上肢患者中有118例表现显著。我们先验地将重大损伤定义为:骨折、脱位、神经血管损伤或ED出现24小时内需要手术干预。具体而言,25.2%的损伤在COVID-19爆发前显著,39.9% (p < 0.001)在COVID-19爆发初期显著。与最初的COVID-19激增相比,COVID-19之前的严重伤害的绝对数量和百分比有所增加,尽管患者总数总体减少了22%。结论:在大流行期间,尽管上肢肌肉骨骼损伤的ED总数量减少,但上肢肌肉骨骼损伤的发生率增加。
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来源期刊
Open Access Emergency Medicine
Open Access Emergency Medicine EMERGENCY MEDICINE-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
85
审稿时长
16 weeks
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