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Journal Article

Citation

Stead LG, Bodhit AN, Shashikant Patel P, Daneshvar Y, Peters KR, Mazzuoccolo A, Kuchibhotla S, Pulvino C, Hatchitt K, Lottenberg LL, Elie-Turenne MC, Hoelle RM, Vedula A, Gabrielli A, Miller BD, Slish JH, Falgiani M, Falgiani T, Tyndall JA. Int. J. Emerg. Med. 2013; 6(1): 5.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1186/1865-1380-6-5

PMID

23445771

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To characterize the patterns of presentation of adults with head injury to the Emergency Department. METHODS: This is a cohort study that sought to collect injury and outcome variables with the goal of characterizing the very early natural history of traumatic brain injury in adults. This IRBapproved project was conducted in collaboration with our Institution's Center for Translational Science Institute. Data were entered in REDCap, a secure database. Statistical analyses were performed using JMP 10.0 pro for Windows. RESULTS: The cohort consisted of 2,394 adults, with 40% being women and 79% Caucasian. The most common mechanism was fall (47%) followed by motor vehicle collision (MVC) (36%). Patients sustaining an MVC were significantly younger than those whose head injury was secondary to a fall (P < 0.0001). Ninety-one percent had CT imaging; hemorrhage was significantly more likely with worse severity as measured by the Glasgow Coma Score (chisquare, P < 0.0001). Forty-four percent were admitted to the hospital, with half requiring ICU admission. In-hospital death was observed in 5.4%, while neurosurgical intervention was required in 8%. For all outcomes, worse TBI severity per GCS was significantly associated with worse outcomes (logistic regression, P < 0.0001, adjusted for age). CONCLUSION: These cohort data highlight the burden of TBI in the Emergency Department and provide important demographic trends for further research.


Language: en

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