Cooke William H, Salinas Jose, Convertino Victor A, Ludwig David A, Hinds Denise, Duke James H, Moore Fredrick A, Holcomb John B
Department of Health and Kinesiology, The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78249, USA.
J Trauma. 2006 Feb;60(2):363-70; discussion 370. doi: 10.1097/01.ta.0000196623.48952.0e.
Accurate prehospital triage of trauma patients is difficult, especially in mass casualty situations. Accordingly, the U.S. Military has initiated a program directed toward improving noninvasive prehospital triage algorithms based on available physiologic data. The purpose of this study was to assess heart rate variability and its association with mortality in prehospital trauma patients.
Trauma patients without significant head injury requiring helicopter transport were identified from a retrospective research database. An equal number, unmatched sample of patients who lived were compared with those who died (n = 15 per group). All patients were transported to a single Level I urban trauma center. The primary independent variable was mortality. Patients with Abbreviated Injury Scale head scores >2 were excluded from the analysis, so that the effects seen were based on hemorrhagic shock. Age, sex, Glasgow Coma Scale score (GCS), blood pressure, pulse pressure, pulse, intubation rate, SpO2, mechanism of injury, transport time, and time of death after admission were recorded. R-waves from the first available 120 seconds of usable data were detected from normal electrocardiograms and heart rate variability was assessed.
Patients who died demonstrated a lower GCS (7.9 +/- 1.4 versus 14.4 +/- 0.2; p = 0.0001) and higher intubation rate (53% of patients who died versus 0% patients who lived). Pulse rate, arterial pressure, and SpO2 were not distinguishable statistically between groups (p = 0.08), but pulse pressure was lower in patients who died (39 +/- 3 versus 50 +/- 2 mm Hg; p = 0.01). Compared with patients who lived, those who died had lower normalized low-frequency (LF) power (42 +/- 6 versus 62 +/- 4 LFnu; p = 0.009), higher high-frequency (HF) power (42 +/- 3 versus 32 +/- 3 HFnu; p = 0.04) and higher HF-to-LF ratio (144 +/- 30 versus 62 +/- 11nu; p = 0.01). With absolute HF/LF adjusted for GCS, the intergroup variance accounted for by HF/LF was reduced to 6% (p = 0.16).
Analysis of heart rate variability provides insight into adequacy of autonomic compensation to severe trauma. In our cohort of trauma patients, low pulse pressures coupled with relatively higher parasympathetic than sympathetic modulation characterized and separated patients who died versus patients who survived traumatic injuries when standard physiologic measurements are not different. These data do not suggest advantages of heart rate variability analysis over GCS scores, but suggest future possibilities for remote noninvasive triage of casualties when GCS scores are unattainable.
对创伤患者进行准确的院前分诊很困难,尤其是在大规模伤亡情况下。因此,美国军方启动了一个项目,旨在根据可用的生理数据改进无创院前分诊算法。本研究的目的是评估院前创伤患者的心率变异性及其与死亡率的关联。
从一个回顾性研究数据库中识别出需要直升机转运且无严重头部损伤的创伤患者。将存活患者与死亡患者按1:1的比例进行非匹配抽样(每组15例)。所有患者均被转运至一家一级城市创伤中心。主要自变量为死亡率。分析时排除了简明损伤定级(AIS)头部评分>2分的患者,以便观察到的效应基于失血性休克。记录患者的年龄、性别、格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分、血压、脉压、脉搏、插管率、血氧饱和度(SpO2)、损伤机制、转运时间及入院后死亡时间。从正常心电图中检测最初120秒可用数据中的R波,并评估心率变异性。
死亡患者的GCS评分较低(7.9±1.4 vs 14.4±0.2;p = 0.0001),插管率较高(死亡患者中有53%插管,存活患者中为0%)。两组间的脉搏率、动脉压和SpO2在统计学上无显著差异(p = 0.08),但死亡患者的脉压较低(39±3 vs 50±2 mmHg;p = 0.01)。与存活患者相比,死亡患者的归一化低频(LF)功率较低(42±6 vs 62±4 LFnu;p = 0.009),高频(HF)功率较高(42±3 vs 32±3 HFnu;p = 0.04),HF与LF的比值也较高(144±30 vs 62±11nu;p = 0.01)。在校正GCS评分后的绝对HF/LF中,HF/LF导致的组间方差降至6%(p = 0.16)。
心率变异性分析有助于深入了解自主神经系统对严重创伤的代偿充分性。在我们的创伤患者队列中,当标准生理指标无差异时,脉压较低且副交感神经调制相对高于交感神经调制是死亡患者与创伤后存活患者的特征及区别所在。这些数据并未表明心率变异性分析优于GCS评分,但提示在无法获取GCS评分时,未来对伤员进行远程无创分诊具有可能性。