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Journal Article

Citation

Katsaragakis S, Drimousis PG, Toutouzas K, Stefanatou M, Larentzakis A, Theodoraki ME, Stergiopoulos S, Theodorou D. Brain Inj. 2010; 24(6): 871-876.

Affiliation

Surgical Intensive Care Unit, 1st Department of Propeudeutic Surgery, University of Athens Medical School, Athens, Greece.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/02699051003789237

PMID

20433285

Abstract

Introduction: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the incidence of TBI in Greece and to provide evidence on the epidemiologic characteristics of the disease. Patients and methods: This is a prospective observational study initiated by the Hellenic Society of Trauma and Emergency Surgery. Thirty hospitals participated in the registry. All trauma patients requiring admission transfer to a higher level centre and those who arrived dead were included in the study. This report evaluated the epidemiologic characteristics of patients with brain trauma, the cause and the severity of the injury and the final outcome. Results: Eight thousand eight hundred and sixty-two patients were included in the registry. Of them, 3383 had at least one brain injury. There were 2451 males and 932 females. Traffic accidents were the leading cause of TBI (54.1%), followed by falls (27.7%). The most affected age group was the 15-44 year olds (48.0%), but TBIs were more lethal in the 45-64 age group (17.8%). Interestingly, a 3.4% mortality was recorded if a TBI was present, even if ISS was relatively low (0-9 ISS group). Conclusion: TBI is a major element of trauma. Knowledge of the epidemiologic characteristics of the disease is imperative for adequate planning and future quality assessment.


Language: en

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