Wang Henry E, Brown Siobhan P, MacDonald Russell D, Dowling Shawn K, Lin Steve, Davis Daniel, Schreiber Martin A, Powell Judy, van Heest Rardi, Daya Mohamud
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Alabama School of Medicine, , Birmingham, Albama, USA.
Emerg Med J. 2014 Mar;31(3):186-91. doi: 10.1136/emermed-2012-202101. Epub 2013 Jan 26.
Prior studies suggest adverse associations between out-of-hospital advanced airway management (AAM) and patient outcomes after major trauma. This secondary analysis of data from the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Hypertonic Saline Trial evaluated associations between out-of-hospital AAM and outcomes in patients suffering isolated severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) or haemorrhagic shock.
This multicentre study included adults with severe TBI (GCS ≤8) or haemorrhagic shock (SBP ≤70 mm Hg, or (SBP 71-90 mm Hg and heart rate ≥108 bpm)). We compared patients receiving out-of-hospital AAM with those receiving emergency department AAM. We evaluated the associations between airway strategy and patient outcomes (28-day mortality, and 6-month poor neurologic or functional outcome) and airway strategy, adjusting for confounders. Analysis was stratified by (1) patients with isolated severe TBI and (2) patients with haemorrhagic shock with or without severe TBI.
Of 2135 patients, we studied 1116 TBI and 528 shock; excluding 491 who died in the field, did not receive AAM or had missing data. In the shock cohort, out-of-hospital AAM was associated with increased 28-day mortality (adjusted OR 5.14; 95% CI 2.42 to 10.90). In TBI, out-of-hospital AAM showed a tendency towards increased 28-day mortality (adjusted OR 1.57; 95% CI 0.93 to 2.64) and 6-month poor functional outcome (1.63; 1.00 to 2.68), but these differences were not statistically significant. Out-of-hospital AAM was associated with poorer 6-month TBI neurologic outcome (1.80; 1.09 to 2.96).
Out-of-hospital AAM was associated with increased mortality after haemorrhagic shock. The adverse association between out-of-hospital AAM and injury outcome is most pronounced in patients with haemorrhagic shock.
先前的研究表明,院外高级气道管理(AAM)与重大创伤后的患者预后之间存在不良关联。本复苏结果联盟高渗盐水试验数据的二次分析评估了院外AAM与孤立性严重创伤性脑损伤(TBI)或失血性休克患者预后之间的关联。
这项多中心研究纳入了患有严重TBI(格拉斯哥昏迷量表≤8)或失血性休克(收缩压≤70 mmHg,或收缩压71 - 90 mmHg且心率≥108次/分钟)的成年人。我们将接受院外AAM的患者与接受急诊科AAM的患者进行了比较。我们评估了气道策略与患者预后(28天死亡率以及6个月时神经功能或功能不良预后)之间的关联,并对气道策略进行了调整以校正混杂因素。分析按以下情况分层:(1)孤立性严重TBI患者;(2)伴有或不伴有严重TBI的失血性休克患者。
在2135例患者中,我们研究了1116例TBI患者和528例休克患者;排除491例在现场死亡、未接受AAM或有缺失数据的患者。在休克队列中,院外AAM与28天死亡率增加相关(校正比值比5.14;95%置信区间2.42至10.90)。在TBI患者中,院外AAM有导致28天死亡率增加的趋势(校正比值比1.57;95%置信区间0.93至2.64)以及6个月时功能不良预后增加的趋势(1.63;1.00至2.68),但这些差异无统计学意义。院外AAM与6个月时TBI患者神经功能预后较差相关(1.80;1.09至2.96)。
院外AAM与失血性休克后死亡率增加相关。院外AAM与损伤预后之间的不良关联在失血性休克患者中最为明显。