Piek J, Chesnut R M, Marshall L F, van Berkum-Clark M, Klauber M R, Blunt B A, Eisenberg H M, Jane J A, Marmarou A, Foulkes M A
Neurochirurgische Klinik, Universität Düsseldorf, Germany.
J Neurosurg. 1992 Dec;77(6):901-7. doi: 10.3171/jns.1992.77.6.0901.
In order to define the role of intracranial and extracranial complications in determining outcome from severe head injury, 734 patients from the Traumatic Coma Data Bank were analyzed. Nine classes of intracranial and 13 classes of extracranial complications occurring within the first 14 days after admission were analyzed, while controlling for age, admission Glasgow Coma Scale motor score, early hypoxia or hypotension, and severe extracranial trauma. Outcome for survivors was based on the last recorded Glasgow Outcome Scale score, obtained a median of 521 days after injury. Intracranial complications did not significantly alter outcome for the study group. Of the extracranial complications, pulmonary, cardiovascular, coagulation, and electrolyte disorders occurred most frequently at 2 to 4 days. Infections developed later, peaking at 5 to 11 days. Gastrointestinal, renal, and hepatic complications followed no specific time course. Electrolyte abnormalities were the most frequent occurrence (59% of patients) but did not alter outcome. Pulmonary infections (41%), shock (29%, systemic blood pressure < or = 90 mm Hg for 30 minutes or more), coagulopathy (19%), and septicemia (10%) were significant independent predictors of an unfavorable outcome. Backward-elimination, stepwise logistic regression modeling indicated that the estimated reduction of unfavorable outcome was 2.9% for the elimination of pneumonia, 3.1% for coagulation disturbances, 1.5% for septicemia, and 9.3% for shock. These data suggest that extracranial complications are highly influential in determining the outcome from severe head injury and that significant improvements in outcome in a sizeable proportion of patients could be accomplished by improving the ability to prevent or reverse pneumonia, hypotension, coagulopathy, and sepsis.
为了明确颅内和颅外并发症在严重颅脑损伤预后判定中的作用,对创伤昏迷数据库中的734例患者进行了分析。分析了入院后前14天内出现的9类颅内并发症和13类颅外并发症,同时对年龄、入院时格拉斯哥昏迷量表运动评分、早期缺氧或低血压以及严重颅外创伤进行了控制。幸存者的预后基于最后记录的格拉斯哥预后量表评分,该评分在受伤后中位数521天获得。颅内并发症对研究组的预后没有显著影响。在颅外并发症中,肺部、心血管、凝血和电解质紊乱最常发生在2至4天。感染出现较晚,在5至11天达到高峰。胃肠道、肾脏和肝脏并发症没有特定的时间进程。电解质异常最为常见(59%的患者),但不影响预后。肺部感染(41%)、休克(29%,全身血压≤90 mmHg持续30分钟或更长时间)、凝血病(19%)和败血症(10%)是不良预后的显著独立预测因素。向后排除法逐步逻辑回归模型表明,消除肺炎可使不良预后估计降低2.9%,凝血障碍降低3.1%,败血症降低1.5%,休克降低9.3%。这些数据表明,颅外并发症在严重颅脑损伤的预后判定中具有高度影响力,并且通过提高预防或逆转肺炎、低血压、凝血病和败血症的能力,可以在相当一部分患者中显著改善预后。