Warnack Elizabeth, Heyer Jessica, Sethi Monica, Tandon Manish, DiMaggio Charles, Pachter Hersch Leon, Frangos Spiros G
NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York 10016, USA.
Am Surg. 2017 Jan 1;83(1):16-22.
In the United States in 2013, nearly 500,000 bicyclists were injured and required emergency department care. The objectives of this study were to describe the types of injuries which urban bicyclists sustain, to analyze the number and type of surgeries required, and to better delineate the services providing care. This is an observational study of injured bicyclists presenting to a Level I trauma center between February 2012 and August 2014. Most data were collected within 24 hours of injury and included demographics, narrative description of the incident, results of initial imaging studies, Injury Severity Score, admission status, length of stay, surgical procedure, and admitting and discharging service. A total of 706 injured bicyclists were included in the study, and 187 bicyclists (26.4%) required hospital admission. Of those admitted, 69 (36.8%) required surgery. There was no difference in gender between those who required surgery and those who did not (P = 0.781). Those who required surgery were older (mean age 39.1 vs 34.1, P = 0.003). Patients requiring surgery had higher Abbreviated Injury Scores for head (P ≤ 0.001), face (P ≤ 0.001), abdomen (P = 0.012), and extremity (P ≤ 0.001) and higher mean Injury Severity Scores (12.6 vs 3.7, P < 0.001). Sixty-nine patients required surgery and were brought to the operating room 82 times for 89 distinct procedures. Lower extremity injuries were the reason for 43 (48.3%) procedures, upper extremity injuries for 14 (15.7%), and facial injuries for 15 (16.9%). Orthopedic surgery performed 50 (56.2%) procedures, followed by plastic surgery (15 procedures; 16.8%). Trauma surgeons performed five (5.6%) procedures in four patients. The majority of admitted patients were admitted and discharged by the trauma service (70.1%, 56.7%, respectively) followed by the orthopedics service (13.9%, 19.8%, respectively). Injured bicyclists represent a unique subset of trauma patients. Orthopedic surgeons are most commonly involved in their operative management and rarely are the operative skills of a general traumatologist required. From a resource perspective, it is more efficient to direct the inpatient care of bicyclists with single-system trauma to the appropriate surgical subspecialty service soon after appropriate initial evaluation and treatment by the trauma service.
2013年在美国,近50万名骑自行车者受伤并需要急诊护理。本研究的目的是描述城市骑自行车者所受损伤的类型,分析所需手术的数量和类型,并更好地描述提供护理的服务。这是一项对2012年2月至2014年8月间前往一级创伤中心就诊的受伤骑自行车者的观察性研究。大多数数据在受伤后24小时内收集,包括人口统计学信息、事件的叙述性描述、初始影像学检查结果、损伤严重程度评分、入院状态、住院时间、手术程序以及收治和出院科室。共有706名受伤的骑自行车者纳入研究,其中187名(26.4%)需要住院治疗。在这些住院患者中,69名(36.8%)需要手术。需要手术和不需要手术的患者在性别上没有差异(P = 0.781)。需要手术的患者年龄更大(平均年龄39.1岁对34.1岁,P = 0.003)。需要手术的患者头部(P≤0.001)、面部(P≤0.001)、腹部(P = 0.012)和四肢(P≤0.001)的简明损伤评分更高,平均损伤严重程度评分也更高(12.6对3.7,P < 0.001)。69名患者需要手术,共进行了82次手术,涉及89种不同的手术操作。下肢损伤是43次(48.3%)手术操作的原因,上肢损伤是14次(15.7%),面部损伤是15次(16.