老年人头部损伤:扫描还是不扫描?做出最佳决定的十个建议

A. Brousseau, É. Mercier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

地面跌落是老年人急诊科(ED)就诊的主要原因。除了了解跌倒的原因,评估潜在的跌倒引起的损伤,如外伤性颅内出血,对急诊临床医生来说是极具挑战性的。病前状况、药物和伴随损伤都会干扰体格检查,并影响传统上与创伤性脑损伤(TBI)相关的体征的患病率。当涉及到使用脑成像(如头部计算机断层扫描(CT))进行创伤性颅内出血的潜在调查时,将考虑许多潜在的预测因素和因素。症状、病史、药物、虚弱、功能状态、护理水平、费用和获得成像的机会都可能影响决策过程。这篇简短的回顾文章将有助于在患者和医疗保健系统的利益做出决定。1. 尽早探索护理目标。护理目标通常是我们在急诊科与病人探讨的最后一件事。然而,对于身体虚弱的老年人,探索护理目标应该是我们首先要做的事情之一,特别是与是否调查的决定有关。如果头部CT显示外伤性颅内出血,患者是否会考虑神经外科手术?这是否符合他们的意愿?如果没有,你可以就此打住。不需要成像,你需要关注对病人重要的事情。2. 65岁以上轻度外伤性脑损伤患者=头部CT扫描并非所有的头部外伤都是TBI。TBI被定义为伴有至少一种神经症状(意识丧失、健忘症、思维混乱等)的头部撞击。对于持续发生TBI的老年人的建议是明确的:≥65岁的TBI患者应接受脑成像检查。新的数据表明,65岁以上的年龄阈值可能会调整到75岁,但这一阈值的安全性需要更可靠的数据来证实。3.创伤性脑损伤相关症状对颅内出血的预测能力较弱,而且往往延迟出现。与衰老相关的不同生理变化,如脑萎缩,即使是轻微的头部撞击,也会增加外伤性颅内出血的风险。与年轻人相比,这些变化在出现症状之前为出血留下了更多的扩张空间。因此,在患者出现神经学症状或GCS下降之前,通常需要更长的时间和更大的颅内出血。正常的体格检查不能排除外伤性颅内出血。4. 颞部和枕部外伤的外部征象增加颅内出血的危险。没有外伤的外部迹象降低了颅内外伤性出血的几率。相反,位于颞顶或枕部的外伤(瘀伤、血肿或撕裂伤)的外部体征与颅内出血的风险增加有关。在加拿大的一项大型前瞻性队列研究中,头部外伤的外部体征是颅内出血的重要因素之一。老年急诊医学杂志2023春季|卷4 |第1期第5篇|主题补充|创伤系列
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Head Injury in Older Adults: To Scan or Not to Scan? Ten Tips to Make the Best Decision
Ground-level falls are a leading cause of emergency department (ED) visits by older adults. In addition to understanding the cause of the fall, the assessment of potential fall-induced injuries such as traumatic intracranial hemorrhage can be highly challenging for emergency clinicians. Premorbid conditions, medications, and concomitant injuries can all interfere with the physical examination and impact the prevalence of signs traditionally associated with traumatic brain injury (TBI). When it comes to the decision to potentially investigate for a traumatic intracranial hemorrhage with brain imaging such as head computed tomography (CT), many potential predictors and factors will be considered. Symptoms, history, medications, frailty, functional status, level of care, cost, and access to imaging will all potentially influence that decision-making process. This brief review article will help make that decision in the interest of the patient and the health care system. 1. Explore goals of care early. Goals of care are often one of the last things we explore with patients in the ED. However, for frail older adults, exploring goals of care should be among the first things we do, particularly relative to the decisions to investigate or not. If the head CT shows a traumatic intracranial hemorrhage, would this patient consider neurosurgery as an option? Is it aligned with their wishes? If not, you can likely stop there. Imaging is not needed and you need to focus on what is important for the patient. 2. A patient over 65 years old and mild traumatic brain injury = head CT scan Not all head traumas are TBI. A TBI is defined as a head impact associated with at least one neurologic symptom (loss of consciousness, amnesia, confusion, etc.). The recommendation for older adults who have sustained a TBI is clear: A patient ≥ 65 years old following a TBI should be investigated with brain imaging. New data suggests that this 65+ age threshold could potentially be adjusted to >75, but the safety of this cutoff needs to be confirmed with more robust data. 3. TBI-related symptoms are less predictive of intracranial hemorrhage and are often delayed. Different physiological changes associated with aging such as cerebral atrophy increase the risk of traumatic intracranial hemorrhage, even following a minor head impact. These changes leave more places for a hemorrhage to expand before becoming symptomatic compared to younger adults. Therefore, it often requires more time and a larger intracranial hemorrhage before the patient displays neurological signs or a decreased GCS. A normal physical examination cannot rule out a traumatic intracranial hemorrhage. 4. Temporal and occipital external signs of trauma increased risk of intracranial hemorrhage. The absence of external signs of trauma decreases the odds of intracranial traumatic hemorrhage. In the opposite, external signs of trauma (bruising, hematoma, or laceration) located on temporoparietal or occipital regions are associated with an increased risk of intracranial bleeding. In a large prospective Canadian cohort study, the presence of external signs of head trauma was one of the factors strongly associated with intracranial bleeding. JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE Spring 2023 | Volume 4 | Issue 1 Article 5 | Topic Supplement | Trauma Series
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