Department of Emergency Medicine, Richmond Emergency Physicians, Bon Secours St Mary's Hospital, Richmond, Virginia2Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Denver Health, University of Colorado, Denver9Department of Epidemiology, Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora.
JAMA. 2015;314(24):2672-81. doi: 10.1001/jama.2015.16316.
Adults with apparently minor head trauma (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] scores ≥13 who appear well on examination) may have severe intracranial injuries requiring prompt intervention. Findings from clinical examination can aid in determining which adults with minor trauma have severe intracranial injuries visible on computed tomography (CT).
To assess systematically the accuracy of symptoms and signs in adults with minor head trauma in order to identify those with severe intracranial injuries.
We performed a systematic search of MEDLINE (1966-2015) and the Cochrane Library to identify studies assessing the diagnosis of intracranial injuries.
Studies were included that measured the performance of findings for identifying intracranial injury with a reference standard of neuroimaging or follow-up evaluation. Fourteen studies (range, 431-7955 patients) met inclusion criteria with patients having GCS scores between 13 and 15 and 50% or more older than 18 years.
Three authors independently performed critical appraisal and data extraction.
The prevalence of severe intracranial injury (requiring prompt intervention) among the 23,079 patients with minor head trauma was 7.1% (95% CI, 6.8%-7.4%) and the prevalence of injuries leading to death or requiring neurosurgical intervention was 0.9% (95% CI, 0.78%-1.0%). The presence of physical examination findings suggestive of skull fracture (likelihood ratio [LR], 16; 95% CI, 3.1-59; specificity, 99%), GCS score of 13 (LR, 4.9; 95% CI, 2.8-8.5; specificity, 97%), 2 or more vomiting episodes (LR, 3.6; 95% CI, 3.1-4.1; specificity, 92%), any decline in GCS score (LR range, 3.4-16; specificity range, 91%-99%;), and pedestrians struck by motor vehicles (LR range, 3.0-4.3; specificity range, 96%-97%) were associated with severe intracranial injury on CT. Among patients with apparent minor head trauma, the absence of any of the features of the Canadian CT Head Rule (≥65 years; ≥2 vomiting episodes, amnesia >30 minutes, pedestrian struck, ejected from vehicle, fall >1 m, suspected skull fracture, or GCS score <15 at 2 hours) had an LR of 0.04 (95% CI, 0-0.65), lowering the probability of severe injury to 0.31% (95% CI, 0%-4.7%). The absence of all the New Orleans Criteria findings (>60 years, intoxication, headache, vomiting, amnesia, seizure, or trauma above the clavicle) had an LR of 0.08 (95% CI, 0.01-0.84), lowering the probability of severe intracranial injury to 0.61% (95% CI, 0.08%-6.0%).
Combinations of history and physical examination features in clinical decision rules can identify patients with minor head trauma at low risk of severe intracranial injuries. Certain findings, including signs of skull fracture, GCS score of 13, 2 or more vomiting episodes, decrease in GCS score, and pedestrians struck by motor vehicles, may help identify patients at increased risk of severe intracranial injuries.
格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分≥13 分且外观检查良好的成人轻度颅脑外伤可能存在需要及时干预的严重颅内损伤。临床检查结果有助于确定哪些轻度创伤的成年人在 CT 上存在严重的颅内损伤。
系统评估成年人轻度颅脑外伤的症状和体征的准确性,以确定哪些患者存在严重的颅内损伤。
我们对 MEDLINE(1966-2015 年)和 Cochrane 图书馆进行了系统检索,以确定评估颅内损伤诊断的研究。
纳入的研究测量了以神经影像学或随访评估为参考标准的颅内损伤发现的表现。有 14 项研究(范围:431-7955 例患者)符合纳入标准,患者的 GCS 评分为 13-15 分,50%或以上的患者年龄大于 18 岁。
三位作者独立进行了关键评估和数据提取。
23079 例轻度颅脑外伤患者中严重颅内损伤(需要及时干预)的患病率为 7.1%(95%CI,6.8%-7.4%),导致死亡或需要神经外科干预的损伤患病率为 0.9%(95%CI,0.78%-1.0%)。体格检查发现颅骨骨折的表现(比值比[LR],16;95%CI,3.1-59;特异性,99%)、GCS 评分为 13(LR,4.9;95%CI,2.8-8.5;特异性,97%)、2 次或更多次呕吐发作(LR,3.6;95%CI,3.1-4.1;特异性,92%)、GCS 评分任何下降(LR 范围,3.4-16;特异性范围,91%-99%)和被机动车撞击的行人(LR 范围,3.0-4.3;特异性范围,96%-97%)与 CT 上的严重颅内损伤有关。在看似轻度颅脑外伤的患者中,加拿大 CT 头部规则(≥65 岁;≥2 次呕吐、>30 分钟遗忘、行人被撞、被抛出车外、坠落>1 米、疑似颅骨骨折或 2 小时内 GCS 评分<15)的任何特征均不存在,LR 为 0.04(95%CI,0-0.65),将严重损伤的可能性降低到 0.31%(95%CI,0%-4.7%)。新奥尔良标准的所有发现(>60 岁、中毒、头痛、呕吐、遗忘、癫痫发作或锁骨以上创伤)均不存在,LR 为 0.08(95%CI,0.01-0.84),将严重颅内损伤的可能性降低到 0.61%(95%CI,0.08%-6.0%)。
临床决策规则中的病史和体格检查特征组合可识别轻度颅脑外伤患者中颅内严重损伤风险较低的患者。某些表现,包括颅骨骨折的迹象、GCS 评分为 13、2 次或更多次呕吐发作、GCS 评分下降和被机动车撞击的行人,可能有助于识别颅内严重损伤风险增加的患者。