Atzema Clare, Mower William R, Hoffman Jerome R, Holmes James F, Killian Anthony J, Wolfson Allan B
Emergency Medicine Center, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA.
J Trauma. 2006 May;60(5):1010-7; discussion 1017. doi: 10.1097/01.ta.0000218038.28064.9d.
Most studies of traumatic intraventricular hemorrhage (tIVH) contain fewer than 25 subjects and are retrospective in design, providing minimal information about the entity and its clinical significance.
We prospectively enrolled trauma patients from 18 centers in North America in the National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study (NEXUS) II if they received an emergent head computed tomography (CT) scan, as determined by the managing physician. Clinical data were collected at the time of enrollment and CT reports were compiled at least 1 month later. We calculated prevalence and demographics of tIVH from the 18 sites, while outcome data were gathered from medical records of patients with tIVH who were seen at any of six sites that participated in the follow-up portion of the study. We considered patients who underwent a neurosurgical intervention or who had a "poor outcome" (Glasgow Outcome Scale score of 1 to 3, death, persistent vegetative state, or severe disability) to have suffered a "combined outcome."
Prevalence of tIVH among all trauma patients who received a head CT was 118 in 8,374, or 1.41%. Among tIVH patients, 70% had a "poor outcome" and 76% had a "combined outcome." A poor outcome appeared to be associated with an abnormal presenting Glasgow Coma Scale score and involvement of the third or fourth ventricle, whereas age appeared to be unrelated. Patients with tIVH and no major associated injury on CT tended to do well; only one patient with isolated tIVH had a poor outcome.
Traumatic IVH is rare and is associated with poor outcomes that seem to be the consequence of associated injuries. Isolated tIVH patients who are clinically well appear to have a functional outcome; we were unable to identify a case of isolated tIVH, combined with a normal neurologic examination, resulting in a poor or combined outcome.
大多数创伤性脑室内出血(tIVH)研究纳入的受试者少于25例,且为回顾性设计,提供的关于该疾病及其临床意义的信息极少。
如果北美18个中心的创伤患者经主治医生判定接受了急诊头颅计算机断层扫描(CT),则将其前瞻性纳入国家急诊X线摄影利用研究(NEXUS)II。在入组时收集临床数据,并至少在1个月后汇总CT报告。我们计算了18个研究点tIVH的患病率和人口统计学数据,而结局数据则从参与研究随访部分的6个研究点中任何一个研究点就诊的tIVH患者的医疗记录中收集。我们将接受神经外科干预或“预后不良”(格拉斯哥预后量表评分为1至3分、死亡、持续性植物状态或严重残疾)的患者视为发生了“综合结局”。
在所有接受头颅CT的创伤患者中,tIVH的患病率为8374例中有118例,即1.41%。在tIVH患者中,70%“预后不良”,76%发生“综合结局”。预后不良似乎与初始格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分异常以及第三或第四脑室受累有关,而年龄似乎与之无关。CT显示无重大相关损伤的tIVH患者往往预后良好;仅1例孤立性tIVH患者预后不良。
创伤性脑室内出血罕见,且与不良结局相关,这些不良结局似乎是相关损伤的结果。临床上情况良好的孤立性tIVH患者似乎有较好的功能结局;我们未能识别出1例孤立性tIVH合并神经系统检查正常但导致预后不良或综合结局的病例。