van Essen Thomas Arjan, Heeringa Jorn Jesse, Muizelaar Jan-Paul
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California Davis Medical Center, 4860 Y St., Suite 3740, Sacramento, CA 95817, United States.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2010 Nov;112(9):775-80. doi: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2010.06.012. Epub 2010 Jul 7.
Whether or not a patient could benefit from a computed tomography (CT) scan and/or the evaluation by a neurosurgeon requires judgment by a clinician of the risk of clinical deterioration. To assess this clinical process we aimed to determine how many of the consultations to the Neurosurgical department (NSG) of UC Davis are appropriately indicated for neurosurgical input or management. Secondly, we investigated how CT is used in the University of California Davis Medical Center (UCDMC) in NSG consults of head injured patients compared to a validated and highly sensitive decision making tool, the Canadian CT Head Rule (CCHR).
Patients were enrolled in this prospective study if they presented to a department of UCDMC other than neurosurgery and when, consequently, the NSG was consulted. The emergency consultations were categorized into three groups: head injury, spine injury and others. Subsequently, the appropriateness of the consultations was evaluated based on the need for evaluation determined by the likelihood of clinically important intracranial lesions for head injury and by the likelihood of clinically important spinal cord injury or spinal cord instability for spine injury. Of the head injured patients with a CT scan the appropriateness of the scan was determined by way of the CCHR.
Between 21 July and 15 August 2008 99 consultations were included: 32 patients with head injuries, 29 with spine injuries, 34 with other diseases and 4 not sufficiently documented patients. 23 classified inappropriate, 69 appropriate and 7 remained unclassified. Of the head injured patients, 10 (31.2%) had gotten a CT scan that was classified inappropriate.
NSG receives 3-4 requests for consultations per day from the other services of UCDMC, of which one is of questionable validity and one of the three CT scans for head injury is not necessary. These results suggest the use of the CCHR in UCDMC would improve patient care and could result in large health-care savings, while there would also be less radiation exposure.
患者是否能从计算机断层扫描(CT)及神经外科医生的评估中获益,需要临床医生判断临床病情恶化的风险。为评估这一临床过程,我们旨在确定加州大学戴维斯分校神经外科(NSG)的会诊中有多少是适合进行神经外科干预或治疗的。其次,我们调查了在加州大学戴维斯分校医疗中心(UCDMC),与经过验证且高度敏感的决策工具——加拿大头颅CT规则(CCHR)相比,CT在头部受伤患者的NSG会诊中是如何使用的。
如果患者前往UCDMC除神经外科以外的科室就诊,随后向NSG咨询,那么这些患者将被纳入这项前瞻性研究。急诊会诊分为三组:头部损伤、脊柱损伤和其他。随后,根据头部损伤时临床上重要颅内病变的可能性以及脊柱损伤时临床上重要脊髓损伤或脊髓不稳定的可能性所确定的评估需求,来评估会诊的适宜性。对于进行了CT扫描的头部受伤患者,通过CCHR来确定扫描的适宜性。
2008年7月21日至8月15日期间,共纳入99例会诊:32例头部受伤患者,29例脊柱受伤患者,34例患有其他疾病的患者以及4例记录不充分的患者。23例被归类为不适当,69例适当,7例仍未分类。在头部受伤患者中,10例(31.2%)进行了被归类为不适当的CT扫描。
NSG每天收到来自UCDMC其他科室3至4次会诊请求,其中一项请求的有效性存疑,且头部损伤的CT扫描中有三分之一是不必要的。这些结果表明,在UCDMC使用CCHR将改善患者护理,并可能大幅节省医疗保健费用,同时辐射暴露也会减少。