Ownbey Misha R, Pekari Timothy B
Department of Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Evans Army Community Hospital, Fort Carson, CO 80913, USA.
Mil Med. 2022 Jan 4;187(1-2):e47-e51. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usab104.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) continues to be a major source of military-related morbidity and mortality. The insidious short- and long-term sequelae of mild TBIs (mTBIs) have come to light, with ongoing research influencing advances in patient care from point of injury onward. Although the DoDI 6490.11 outlines mTBI care in the deployed setting, there is currently no standardized training requirement on mTBI care in the far-forward deployed setting. As the Joint Trauma System (JTS) is considered to be one of the leaders in standard of care trauma medicine in the deployed environment and is often the go-to resource for forward-deployed medical providers, it is our goal that this review be utilized by the JTS with prominent mTBI resources to disseminate a clinical practice guideline (CPG) appropriate for the far-forward operational environment.
The resources used for this review reflect the most current data, knowledge, and recommendations associated with research and findings from reputable sources as the Traumatic Brain Injury Center of Excellence (TBI CoE; formerly the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center), the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as prominent journals such as Academic Emergency Medicine, British Journal of Sports Medicine, and JAMA. We searched for articles under keyword searches, limiting results to less than 5 years old, and had military relevance. About 1,740 articles were found using keywords; filters on our search yielded 707 articles, 100 of which offered free full text. The topic of far-forward deployed management of mTBI does not have a robust academic background at this time, and recommendations are derived from a combination of academic evidence in more traditional clinical settings, as well as author's direct experience in managing mTBI casualties in the austere environment.
At the time of this writing, there is no JTS CPG for management of mTBI and there is no pre-deployment training requirement for medical providers for treating mTBI casualties in the far-forward deployed setting. The TBI CoE does, however, have a multitude of resources available to medical providers to assist with post-mTBI care. In this article, we review these clinical tools, pre-planning considerations including discussions and logistical planning with medical command, appropriate evaluation and treatment for mTBI casualties based on TBI CoE recommendations, the need for uniform and consistent documentation and diagnosis in the acute period, tactical and operational considerations, and other considerations as a medical provider in an austere setting with limited resources for treating casualties with mTBIs.
Given the significant morbidity and mortality associated with mTBIs, as well as operational and tactical considerations in the austere deployed setting, improved acute and subacute care, as well as standardization of care for these casualties within their area of operations is necessary. The far-forward deployed medical provider should be trained in management of mTBI, incorporate mTBI-associated injuries into medical planning with their command, and discuss the importance of mTBI management with servicemembers and their units. Proper planning, training, standardization of mTBI management in the deployed setting, and inter-unit cooperation and coordination for mTBI care will help maintain servicemember readiness and unit capability on the battlefield. Standardization in care and documentation in this austere military environment may also assist future research into mTBI management. As there is currently no JTS CPG covering this type of care, the authors recommend sharing the TBI CoE management guideline with medical providers who will be reasonably expected to evaluate and manage mTBI in the austere deployed setting.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)仍然是军事相关发病和死亡的主要原因。轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)的隐匿性短期和长期后遗症已被揭示,正在进行的研究影响着从受伤时刻起的患者护理进展。尽管国防部指令6490.11概述了部署环境中的mTBI护理,但目前在前沿部署环境中对mTBI护理尚无标准化培训要求。由于联合创伤系统(JTS)被认为是部署环境中创伤医学护理标准的领导者之一,并且通常是前沿部署医疗人员的首选资源,我们的目标是让JTS利用这篇综述以及突出的mTBI资源来传播适用于前沿作战环境的临床实践指南(CPG)。
本综述所使用的资源反映了与来自著名机构(如卓越创伤性脑损伤中心(TBI CoE;前身为国防和退伍军人脑损伤中心)、疾病控制与预防中心)以及知名期刊(如《学术急诊医学》《英国运动医学杂志》和《美国医学会杂志》)的研究和发现相关的最新数据、知识和建议。我们通过关键词搜索文章,将结果限制在不到5年且与军事相关的范围内。使用关键词找到约1740篇文章;搜索过滤器筛选出707篇文章,其中100篇提供免费全文。目前,前沿部署的mTBI管理主题没有强大的学术背景,建议来自更传统临床环境中的学术证据以及作者在严峻环境中管理mTBI伤员的直接经验的结合。
在撰写本文时,JTS没有针对mTBI管理的CPG,并且在前沿部署环境中对医疗人员治疗mTBI伤员没有部署前培训要求。然而,TBI CoE确实为医疗人员提供了大量资源以协助mTBI后的护理。在本文中,我们回顾了这些临床工具、预规划考虑因素,包括与医疗司令部的讨论和后勤规划、基于TBI CoE建议对mTBI伤员进行适当的评估和治疗、急性期统一和一致记录与诊断的必要性、战术和作战考虑因素,以及作为资源有限的严峻环境中治疗mTBI伤员的医疗人员的其他考虑因素。
鉴于与mTBI相关的高发病率和死亡率,以及严峻部署环境中的作战和战术考虑因素,改善急性和亚急性护理以及在其作战区域内对这些伤员的护理标准化是必要的。前沿部署的医疗人员应接受mTBI管理培训,将mTBI相关损伤纳入与司令部的医疗规划中,并与军人及其单位讨论mTBI管理的重要性。在部署环境中对mTBI管理进行适当规划、培训、标准化,以及单位间对mTBI护理的合作与协调将有助于维持军人在战场上的准备状态和部队能力。在这种严峻的军事环境中护理和记录的标准化也可能有助于未来对mTBI管理的研究。由于目前没有JTS CPG涵盖此类护理,作者建议与有望在严峻部署环境中评估和管理mTBI的医疗人员分享TBI CoE管理指南。