Jacobs Bianca Grecu, Turnipseed Samuel D, Nguyen Anna N, Salcedo Edgardo S, Nishijima Daniel K
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, California.
Department of Surgery, University of California, Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, California.
J Emerg Med. 2015 Dec;49(6):992-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2015.03.024. Epub 2015 Jun 3.
Patients often present to the emergency department (ED) as "found down," with limited history to suggest a primary traumatic or medical etiology.
The study objective was to describe the characteristics of "found down" adult patients presenting to the ED as trauma, specifically the incidence of acute medical diagnoses and major trauma.
Using an institutional trauma registry, we reviewed trauma activations with the cause of injury "found down" between January 2008 and December 2012. We excluded patients with cardiac arrest, transfers from other hospitals, and patients with a more than likely (>50%) traumatic or medical etiology on initial ED presentation. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were reviewed by two independent abstractors. We abstracted demographic, clinical, injury severity, and outcomes variables. Major trauma was defined as Injury Severity Score ≥ 16.
There were 659 patients identified with the cause of injury "found down." A total of 207 (31%) patients met inclusion criteria; median age was 67 years (interquartile range 50-82 years), and 110 (53%) were male. Among the included patients, 137 (66%, 95% confidence interval [Cl] 59-73%) had a discharge diagnosis of an acute medical condition, 14 (7%, 95% Cl 4-11%) with major trauma alone, 21 (10%, 95% Cl 6-15) with both an acute medical condition and major trauma, and 35 (17%, 95% Cl 12-23%) with minor trauma. The most common acute medical diagnoses were toxicological (56 patients, 35%; 95% Cl 28-43%) and infectious (32 patients, 20%; 95% Cl 14-27%).
Acute medical diagnoses were common in undifferentiated ED patients "found down" in an institutional trauma registry. Clinicians should maintain a broad differential diagnosis in the workup of the undifferentiated "found down" patient.
患者常以“被发现倒地”的状态被送至急诊科(ED),可供提示原发性创伤或病因的病史有限。
本研究的目的是描述以创伤形式被送至急诊科的“被发现倒地”成年患者的特征,尤其是急性内科诊断和严重创伤的发生率。
我们利用机构创伤登记处,回顾了2008年1月至2012年12月期间因“被发现倒地”而激活创伤救治流程的病例。我们排除了心脏骤停患者、从其他医院转来的患者,以及在急诊科初次就诊时极有可能(>50%)由创伤或内科病因导致的患者。纳入和排除标准由两名独立的提取人员进行审核。我们提取了人口统计学、临床、损伤严重程度和结局变量。严重创伤定义为损伤严重度评分≥16分。
共识别出659例因“被发现倒地”导致损伤的患者。共有207例(31%)患者符合纳入标准;中位年龄为67岁(四分位间距50 - 82岁),110例(53%)为男性。在纳入的患者中,137例(66%,95%置信区间[Cl] 59 - 73%)出院诊断为急性内科疾病,14例(7%,95% Cl 4 - 11%)仅为严重创伤,21例(10%,95% Cl 6 - 15)既有急性内科疾病又有严重创伤,35例(17%,95% Cl 12 - 23%)为轻度创伤。最常见的急性内科诊断为中毒(56例患者,35%;95% Cl 28 - 43%)和感染(32例患者,20%;95% Cl 14 - 27%)。
在机构创伤登记处“被发现倒地”的未分化急诊科患者中,急性内科诊断很常见。临床医生在对未分化的“被发现倒地”患者进行检查时应保持广泛的鉴别诊断。