Raj Rahul, Skrifvars Markus B, Kivisaari Riku, Hernesniemi Juha, Lappalainen Jaakko, Siironen Jari
1 Department of Neurosurgery, Helsinki University Hospital , Helsinki, Finland .
J Neurotrauma. 2015 Jan 15;32(2):95-100. doi: 10.1089/neu.2014.3488. Epub 2014 Nov 13.
The effect of blood alcohol concentration (BAC) on outcome after traumatic brain injury (TBI) is controversial. We sought to assess the independent effect of positive BAC on long-term outcome in patients with TBI treated in the intensive care unit (ICU). We performed a retrospective analysis of 405 patients with TBI, admitted to the ICU of a large urban Level 1 trauma center between January 2009 and December 2012. Outcome was six-month mortality and unfavorable neurological outcome (defined as a Glasgow Outcome Scale score of 1 [death], 2, [vegetative state], or 3 [severe disability]). Patients were categorized by admission BAC into: no BAC (0.0‰; n=99), low BAC (<2.3‰; n=140) and high BAC (≥2.3‰; n=166). Logistic regression analysis, adjusting for baseline risk and severity of illness, was used to assess the independent effect of BAC on outcome (using the no BAC group as the reference). Overall six-month mortality was 25% and unfavorable outcome was 46%. Multivariate analysis showed low BAC to independently reduce risk of six-month mortality compared with no BAC (low BAC adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 0.41, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.19-0.88, p=0.021) and high BAC (AOR 0.58, 95% CI 0.29-1.15, p=0.120). Furthermore, a trend towards reduced risk of six-month unfavorable neurological outcome for patients with positive BAC, compared to patients with negative BAC, was noted, although this did not reach statistical significance (low BAC AOR 0.65, 95% CI 0.34-1.22, p=0.178, and high BAC AOR 0.59, 95% CI 0.32-1.09, p=0.089). In conclusion, low admission BAC (<2.3‰) was found to independently reduce risk of six-month mortality for patients with TBI, and a trend towards improved long-term neurological outcome was found for BAC-positive patients. The role of alcohol as a neuroprotective agent warrants further studies.
血液酒精浓度(BAC)对创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后预后的影响存在争议。我们旨在评估阳性BAC对入住重症监护病房(ICU)的TBI患者长期预后的独立影响。我们对2009年1月至2012年12月期间入住一家大型城市一级创伤中心ICU的405例TBI患者进行了回顾性分析。预后指标为6个月死亡率和不良神经学预后(定义为格拉斯哥预后量表评分为1[死亡]、2[植物状态]或3[严重残疾])。患者根据入院时的BAC分为:无BAC(0.0‰;n = 99)、低BAC(<2.3‰;n = 140)和高BAC(≥2.3‰;n = 166)。采用逻辑回归分析,对基线风险和疾病严重程度进行校正,以评估BAC对预后的独立影响(以无BAC组作为对照)。总体6个月死亡率为25%,不良预后为46%。多变量分析显示,与无BAC相比,低BAC可独立降低6个月死亡率风险(低BAC校正优势比[AOR]为0.41,95%置信区间[CI]为0.19 - 0.88,p = 0.021),与高BAC相比亦如此(AOR为0.58,95%CI为0.29 - 1.15,p = 0.120)。此外,与BAC阴性患者相比,BAC阳性患者6个月不良神经学预后风险有降低趋势,尽管未达到统计学显著性(低BAC AOR为0.65,95%CI为0.34 - 1.22,p = 0.178;高BAC AOR为0.59,95%CI为0.32 - 1.09,p = 0.089)。总之,发现入院时低BAC(<2.3‰)可独立降低TBI患者6个月死亡率风险,且BAC阳性患者有长期神经学预后改善趋势。酒精作为一种神经保护剂的作用值得进一步研究。