Division of Trauma and General Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Division of Trauma and General Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
J Surg Res. 2021 May;261:385-393. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2020.12.051. Epub 2021 Jan 22.
Trauma field triage matches injured patients to the appropriate level of care. Prior work suggests the Glasgow Coma Scale motor (GCSm) is as accurate as the total GCS (GCSt) and easier to use. However, older patients present with higher GCS for a given injury, and as such, it is unclear if this substitution is advisable. Our objective was to compare the GCS deficit patterns between geriatric and adult patients presenting with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), as well as the diagnostic performance of the GCSm versus GCSt within the field triage criteria in these populations.
We conducted a retrospective, observational cohort study of patients ≥16 y in the National Trauma Data Bank 2007-2015. GCS deficit patterns were compared between adults (16-65) and geriatric patients (>65). Measures of diagnostic performance of GCSt≤13 versus GCSm≤5 criteria to predict trauma center need (TCN) were compared.
In total, 4,480,185 patients were analyzed (28% geriatric). Geriatric patients more frequently presented with non-motor-only deficits than adults (16.4% versus 12.4%, P < 0.001), and these patients demonstrated higher severe TBI (40.3% versus 36.7%, P < 0.001) and craniotomy (5.8% versus 5.1%, P < 0.001) rates. GCSt was more sensitive and accurate in predicting TCN for geriatric patients and had lower rates of undertriage as compared to GCSm.
Geriatric patients more frequently present with non-motor-only deficits after injury, and this is associated with severe head injury. Substitution of GCSm for GCSt would exacerbate undertriage in geriatric patients and, thus, the total GCS should be maintained for field triage in geriatric patients.
创伤现场分诊将受伤患者与适当的治疗水平相匹配。先前的研究表明,格拉斯哥昏迷量表运动(GCSm)与总格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCSt)一样准确,且使用更方便。然而,对于给定的损伤,老年患者的 GCS 评分更高,因此,尚不清楚这种替代是否可行。我们的目的是比较老年和成年患者在出现严重创伤性脑损伤(TBI)时的 GCS 缺陷模式,以及在这些人群的现场分诊标准中 GCSm 与 GCSt 的诊断性能。
我们对 2007-2015 年国家创伤数据库中年龄≥16 岁的患者进行了回顾性、观察性队列研究。比较了成年患者(16-65 岁)和老年患者(>65 岁)之间的 GCS 缺陷模式。比较了 GCSt≤13 与 GCSm≤5 标准预测创伤中心需求(TCN)的诊断性能。
共分析了 4480185 例患者(28%为老年患者)。与成年患者相比,老年患者更常出现非运动性缺陷(16.4%比 12.4%,P<0.001),且这些患者表现出更高的严重 TBI(40.3%比 36.7%,P<0.001)和开颅手术(5.8%比 5.1%,P<0.001)发生率。与 GCSm 相比,GCSt 在预测老年患者 TCN 方面更敏感、更准确,且漏诊率较低。
受伤后老年患者更常出现非运动性缺陷,这与严重头部损伤有关。用 GCSm 替代 GCSt 会增加老年患者的漏诊率,因此,在老年患者的现场分诊中应保留总格拉斯哥昏迷量表。