Adeleye Amos O, Ogun Millicent I
Division of Neurological Surgery, Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Department of Neurological Surgery, University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, Nigeria.
Front Neurol. 2017 Dec 15;8:695. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00695. eCollection 2017.
Africa and other Asian low middle-income countries account for the greatest burden of the global road-traffic injury (RTI)-related head injury (HI). This study set out to describe the incidence, causation, and severity of RTI-related HI and associated injuries in a Nigerian academic neurosurgical practice.
This is a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of RTI-related HI from a prospective HI registry in an academic neurosurgery practice in Nigeria.
All-terrain RTI accounted for 80.6% (833/1,034) of HI over a 7-year study period. All age groups were involved, mean 33.06 years (SD 18.30), mode 21-30, 231/833 (27.7%). The male:female ratio was 631:202, ≈3:1. The road trauma occurred exclusively from motorcycle-and motor-vehicle crash (MCC/MVC), MCC caused 56.8% (473/833) of these; the victims were vulnerable road users (VRU) in 74%, and >90% belong in the low socioeconomic class. Using the Glasgow Coma Scale grading, the HI was moderate/severe in 52%; loss of consciousness occurred in 93%, the Abbreviated Injury Severity-head > 3 in 74%, and computed tomography (CT) Rotterdam score > 3 in 52%. Significant extracranial injuries occurred in many organ systems, 421/833 (50.5%) having Injury Severity Score (ISS) > 25. Surgical lesions included extensive brain contusions in 157 (18.8%); acute extradural hematoma in 34 (4.1%); acute subdural hematoma in 32 (3.8%); and traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage in 27 (3.2%), but only 97 (11.6%) received operative care for various logistic reasons. The in-hospital outcome was good in 71.3% and poor in 28.7%; the statistically significant ( < 0.001) determinants of this outcome profile were the severity of the HI, the CT Rotterdam score, and the ISS.
In this study from Nigeria, RTI-related HI emanates from significant trauma to vulnerable road users and are caused exclusively by motorcycles and motor vehicles.
非洲及其他亚洲中低收入国家承担着全球道路交通伤(RTI)相关头部损伤(HI)的最大负担。本研究旨在描述尼日利亚一家学术性神经外科实践中RTI相关HI及相关损伤的发生率、病因及严重程度。
这是一项对尼日利亚一家学术性神经外科实践中前瞻性HI登记处的RTI相关HI进行的回顾性横断面分析。
在为期7年的研究期间,全地形RTI导致的HI占80.6%(833/1034)。各年龄组均有涉及,平均年龄33.06岁(标准差18.30),众数为21 - 30岁,231/833(27.7%)。男女比例为631:202,约为3:1。道路创伤仅由摩托车和机动车碰撞(MCC/MVC)引起,其中MCC导致了56.8%(473/833)的此类损伤;74%的受害者为易受伤害道路使用者(VRU),且超过90%属于社会经济地位较低阶层。采用格拉斯哥昏迷量表分级,52%的HI为中度/重度;93%的患者出现意识丧失,74%的患者简明损伤定级 - 头部>3,52%的患者鹿特丹CT评分>3。许多器官系统出现了严重的颅外损伤,421/833(50.5%)的损伤严重程度评分(ISS)>25。手术病变包括157例(18.8%)广泛脑挫伤;34例(4.1%)急性硬膜外血肿;32例(3.8%)急性硬膜下血肿;27例(3.2%)创伤性脑出血,但由于各种后勤原因,只有97例(11.6%)接受了手术治疗。院内结局良好的占71.3%,不良的占28.7%;该结局概况的统计学显著(<0.001)决定因素为HI的严重程度、鹿特丹CT评分和ISS。
在这项来自尼日利亚的研究中,RTI相关HI源于对易受伤害道路使用者的严重创伤,且仅由摩托车和机动车引起。