Cotton Bryan A, Pryor John P, Chinwalla Imtiaz, Wiebe Douglas J, Reilly Patrick M, Schwab C William
Department of Surgery, Division of Traumatology and Surgical Critical Care, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Trauma. 2005 Dec;59(6):1400-7; discussion 1407-9. doi: 10.1097/01.ta.0000196005.49422.e6.
Cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) has a well-established association with a high risk of respiratory complications. We sought to determine whether high-thoracic (HT) SCI was associated with a similar increased risk of respiratory complications and death.
This was a retrospective cohort study of all adult patients with thoracolumbar injuries entered into the Pennsylvania Trauma System Foundation registry between January 1993 and December 2002. Records were reviewed for the documentation of respiratory complications (intubation, tracheostomy, bronchoscopy, pneumonia) and mortality. The data were then evaluated controlling for age, sex, Glasgow Coma Scale, and Injury Severity Score.
In all, 11,080 patients met inclusion criteria: 4,258 patients had thoracic spine fractures and 6,226 patients had lumbar spine fractures, all without SCI; and 596 patients had thoracic SCI (T1 to T6, 231; T7 to T12, 365). Respiratory complications occurred in 51.1% of patients with T1 to T6 SCI (versus 34.5% in T7 to T12 SCI and 27.5% in thoracic fractures). The need for intubation, the risk of pneumonia, and risk of death were significantly greater for patients with T1- to T6-level spinal cord injuries. Among patients with an Injury Severity Score less than 17 (n = 6427), the relative mortality risk was 26.7 times higher among those who developed respiratory complications (9.9% versus 0.4%).
Compared with patients with low thoracic SCI or thoracolumbar fractures, patients with HT-SCI have an increased risk of pneumonia and death. Respiratory complications significantly increase the mortality risk in less severely injured patients. The current findings suggest that HT-SCI patients warrant intensive monitoring and aggressive pulmonary care and attention, similar to that given for patients with cervical SCI.
颈髓损伤(SCI)与呼吸并发症的高风险之间存在明确的关联。我们试图确定高位胸椎(HT)脊髓损伤是否与呼吸并发症和死亡的类似增加风险相关。
这是一项对1993年1月至2002年12月期间录入宾夕法尼亚创伤系统基金会登记处的所有成年胸腰椎损伤患者的回顾性队列研究。对呼吸并发症(插管、气管切开、支气管镜检查、肺炎)和死亡率的记录进行了审查。然后对数据进行评估,控制年龄、性别、格拉斯哥昏迷量表和损伤严重程度评分。
共有11,080名患者符合纳入标准:4,258名患者有胸椎骨折,6,226名患者有腰椎骨折,均无脊髓损伤;596名患者有胸椎脊髓损伤(T1至T6,231例;T7至T12,365例)。T1至T6脊髓损伤患者中51.1%发生呼吸并发症(T7至T12脊髓损伤患者为34.5%,胸椎骨折患者为27.5%)。T1至T6级脊髓损伤患者的插管需求、肺炎风险和死亡风险显著更高。在损伤严重程度评分低于17分的患者(n = 6427)中,发生呼吸并发症的患者相对死亡风险高26.7倍(9.9%对0.4%)。
与低位胸椎脊髓损伤或胸腰椎骨折患者相比,高位胸椎脊髓损伤患者的肺炎和死亡风险增加。呼吸并发症显著增加了损伤较轻患者的死亡风险。目前的研究结果表明,高位胸椎脊髓损伤患者需要强化监测和积极的肺部护理及关注,类似于给予颈髓损伤患者的护理。