Bahl Amit, Schafer Steven
Department of Emergency Medicine, Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan, USA.
J Emerg Trauma Shock. 2018 Apr-Jun;11(2):88-91. doi: 10.4103/JETS.JETS_52_17.
Geriatric head trauma resulting from falls has been extensively studied both in the presence and absence of blood thinners. In this population, however, the prevalence and extent of abdominal injury resulting from falls are much less defined.
We aim to evaluate the utility of abdominal computed tomography (CT) imaging in geriatric patients on Warfarin with a recent history of fall.
A retrospective analysis was completed of consecutive geriatric patients who presented to a Level 1 Trauma Center emergency department after fall from standing while taking Warfarin.
Inclusion criteria included age 65 years or older and fall while taking Warfarin. Incomplete medical records were excluded from the study. Data collection included the type of anticoagulant medications, demographics, physical examination, laboratories, CT/X-ray findings if ordered, and final diagnosis on admission. Categorical variables were examined using Pearson's Chi-square where appropriate (expected frequency >5), or Fisher's Exact test. Continuous variables were examined using nonparametric Wilcoxon rank tests.
Eight hundred and sixty-three charts were reviewed. One hundred and thirty-one subjects met inclusion criteria. Mean age was 83 years. Nearly 39.6% of patients were male. A total of 48 patients had abdominal CT imaging. Seven of the 131 patients (5.3%) had an abdominal injury. Abdominal tenderness was predictive of injury, with 4 of 7 cases with abdominal injury demonstrating abdominal tenderness versus only 10 of 124 cases without abdominal injury demonstrating tenderness ( = 0.003). Abdominal CTs were ordered in 11 of 19 cases of patients that exhibited head trauma yet none of these patients were shown to have sustained abdominal trauma ( = 0.08). There was no association between international normalized ratio level and presence of abdominal injury ( = 0.99).
A small percentage of elderly fall patients on Warfarin have a significant abdominal injury. Anticoagulated geriatric patients are sometimes subjected to abdominal scans liberally without supporting physical examination findings such as abdominal tenderness or presence of a distracting injury. Specifically, the utility of abdominal CT is questionable in isolated head injury patients. Further, taking Warfarin or other anticoagulant medications do not seem to increase the risk of intraabdominal injury.
无论是否使用血液稀释剂,因跌倒导致的老年头部创伤都已得到广泛研究。然而,在这一人群中,因跌倒导致的腹部损伤的患病率和程度却鲜为人知。
我们旨在评估腹部计算机断层扫描(CT)成像在近期有跌倒史的服用华法林的老年患者中的应用价值。
对连续的老年患者进行回顾性分析,这些患者在服用华法林期间从站立状态跌倒后被送至一级创伤中心急诊科。
纳入标准包括年龄65岁及以上且在服用华法林期间跌倒。不完整的病历被排除在研究之外。数据收集包括抗凝药物类型、人口统计学资料、体格检查、实验室检查、若已进行则包括CT/X光检查结果以及入院时的最终诊断。分类变量在适当情况下(预期频数>5)使用Pearson卡方检验,或Fisher精确检验。连续变量使用非参数Wilcoxon秩和检验进行检查。
共审查了863份病历。131名受试者符合纳入标准。平均年龄为83岁。近39.6%的患者为男性。共有48名患者进行了腹部CT成像。131名患者中有7名(5.3%)有腹部损伤。腹部压痛可预测损伤,7例腹部损伤患者中有4例表现出腹部压痛,而124例无腹部损伤患者中只有10例表现出压痛(P = 0.003)。19例头部创伤患者中有11例进行了腹部CT检查,但这些患者均未被证实有腹部创伤(P = 0.08)。国际标准化比值水平与腹部损伤的存在之间无关联(P = 0.99)。
服用华法林的老年跌倒患者中有一小部分存在严重腹部损伤。接受抗凝治疗的老年患者有时在没有诸如腹部压痛或存在其他干扰性损伤等支持性体格检查结果的情况下就被随意进行腹部扫描。具体而言,腹部CT在单纯头部损伤患者中的应用价值值得怀疑。此外,服用华法林或其他抗凝药物似乎并不会增加腹腔内损伤的风险。