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Journal Article

Citation

Nelson J, Billeter AT, Seifert B, Neuhaus V, Trentz O, Hofer C, Turina M. Crit. Care 2012; 16(3): R77.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/cc11334

PMID

22568946

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Morbid obesity and its consequences are considered risks factors for adverse outcome in trauma, although the pathophysiologic mechanisms are incompletely understood. The aim of this study was to compare initial resuscitation, treatment and short-term outcome of severely injured patients by body mass index (BMI). METHODS: 1084 severely injured patients with an injury severity score of 16 or greater were enrolled between 1996 and 2009 and grouped according to BMI. Their course of treatment and in-hospital outcome were analyzed by univariate and multivariate comparison. RESULTS: 603 patients (55.6%) were of normal weight with a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 BMI, 361 (33.3%) had BMI values between 25 and 29.9, and 90 patients (8.3%) were obese (BMI[greater than or equal to]30). 30 patients (2.8%) had BMI levels below 18.5. All groups were comparable with respect to injury severity, initial resuscitation, and time to ICU admission. There was a tendency towards higher mortality in obese (mortality 24.4%) and also overweight patients (18.8%) when compared to patients with a normal BMI (16.6%). Obese patients showed the highest mortality on day 0 (8.9% versus 2.8% in the normal weight group, P=0.023), mostly due to persistent shock (6.7%). When corrected for BMI, obese patients are provided significantly lower volumes of iv-fluids during the initial resuscitation period. CONCLUSIONS: In contrast to the mostly American literature, only a low percentage of trauma patients at a European trauma center are obese. These patients are at risk of higher mortality from persistent hemorrhagic shock in the initial phase after trauma, which may potentially be related to relative hypovolemia during the resuscitation period. In the later course of treatment, no significant differences exist with respect to specific complications, hospital stay, or in-hospital mortality.


Language: en

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