Department of Neurosurgery, Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2014 Jan;81(1):165-72. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2012.11.068. Epub 2012 Nov 24.
Commonly, patients undergoing craniotomy are admitted to an intensive care setting postoperatively to allow for close monitoring. We aim to determine the frequency with which patients who have undergone elective craniotomies require intensive care unit (ICU)-level interventions or experience significant complications during the postoperative period to identify a subset of patients for whom an alternative to ICU-level care may be appropriate.
Following Institutional Review Board approval, a prospective, consecutive cohort of adult patients undergoing elective craniotomy was established at the Massachusetts General Hospital between the dates of April 2010 and March 2011. Inclusion criteria were intradural operations requiring craniotomy performed on adults (18 years of age or older). Exclusion criteria were cases of an urgent or emergent nature, patients who remained intubated postoperatively, and patients who had a ventriculostomy drain in place at the conclusion of the case.
Four hundred patients were analyzed. Univariate analysis revealed that patients with diabetes (P = 0.00047), those who required intraoperative blood product administration (P = 0.032), older patients (P < 0.0001), those with higher intraoperative blood losses (P = 0.041), and those who underwent longer surgical procedures (P = 0.021) were more likely to require ICU-level interventions or experience significant postoperative complications. Multivariate analysis only found diabetes (P = 0.0005) and age (P = 0.0091) to be predictive of a patient's need for postoperative ICU admission.
Diabetes and older age predict the need for ICU-level intervention after elective craniotomy. Properly selected patients may not require postcraniotomy ICU monitoring. Further study of resource utilization is necessary to validate these preliminary findings, particularly in different hospital types.
通常情况下,接受开颅手术的患者术后会被收治到重症监护病房以进行密切监测。我们旨在确定接受择期开颅手术的患者在术后期间需要重症监护病房(ICU)干预或经历重大并发症的频率,以确定可能适合替代 ICU 级护理的患者亚组。
在获得机构审查委员会批准后,2010 年 4 月至 2011 年 3 月期间,在马萨诸塞州综合医院建立了一项前瞻性、连续的成年择期开颅手术患者队列研究。纳入标准为需要开颅的硬脑膜内手术,患者为成年人(18 岁或以上)。排除标准为紧急或紧急情况、术后仍需插管的患者以及在手术结束时放置脑室引流管的患者。
共分析了 400 例患者。单因素分析显示,患有糖尿病的患者(P = 0.00047)、需要术中血液制品输注的患者(P = 0.032)、年龄较大的患者(P < 0.0001)、术中失血较多的患者(P = 0.041)和手术时间较长的患者(P = 0.021)更有可能需要 ICU 级干预或经历重大术后并发症。多因素分析仅发现糖尿病(P = 0.0005)和年龄(P = 0.0091)是预测患者术后需要 ICU 入院的因素。
糖尿病和年龄较大预测择期开颅术后需要 ICU 干预。适当选择的患者可能不需要术后 ICU 监测。需要进一步研究资源利用情况,以验证这些初步发现,特别是在不同类型的医院中。