Department of Emergency Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Department of Neurology, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
BMJ Open. 2022 Jun 29;12(6):e057308. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057308.
To determine the frequency of post-traumatic complaints and recovery rate of non-hospitalised patients with minor head injury (MHI) and their relationship with demographic and injury characteristics. We also evaluated the differences between patient groups in this least severe category of brain and head injury.
Prospective cohort follow-up study.
Patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) of a tertiary hospital in the Netherlands.
242 patients with MHI (n=100 with head injury only and n=142 with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI)) discharged home directly after evaluation at the ED.
The primary outcome measure was incomplete recovery at 3 months measured by the Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended score <8. Secondary outcome measures were number of post-traumatic complaints assessed 2 weeks and 3 months postinjury by a standardised questionnaire. Also the number of patients that visited their general practitioner because of persistent complaints was determined.
Three months postinjury 48% of patients reported more than one post-traumatic complaint. Half (51%) of patients showed incomplete recovery. Incomplete recovery was associated with headache directly postinjury (OR 3.27, 95% CI 1.28 to 8.34), age (OR 1.02, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.05) and the number of post-traumatic complaints (OR 1.24, 95% CI 1.09 to 1.40) and depression (OR 6.31, 95% CI 1.24 to 32.00) 2 weeks postinjury. Incomplete recovery was comparable between the head injury only and mTBI group (55% vs 50%, 95% CI -12.5 to -23.0). In total 36 MHI patients (28%) visited their general practitioner because of complaints related to their head injury.
Half of the non-hospitalised patients with MHI experienced incomplete recovery after 3 months without differences between head injury only and mTBI patients. Therefore, early identification of patients at risk for incomplete recovery must be started at the ED to provide appropriate aftercare to avoid long-term post-traumatic complaints.
确定非住院治疗的轻度头部损伤(MHI)患者出现创伤后主诉的频率和恢复率,及其与人口统计学和损伤特征的关系。我们还评估了在这种最轻微的脑和头部损伤患者群体中,不同患者群体之间的差异。
前瞻性队列随访研究。
荷兰一家三级医院的急诊科。
242 名 MHI 患者(100 名单纯头部损伤患者和 142 名轻度创伤性脑损伤患者),在急诊科评估后直接出院回家。
格拉斯哥结局扩展评分(GOS-E)<8 表示 3 个月时未完全恢复。次要结局测量指标:使用标准化问卷评估受伤后 2 周和 3 个月时的创伤后主诉数量。还确定了因持续存在主诉而就诊普通医生的患者数量。
受伤后 3 个月,48%的患者报告有超过 1 种创伤后主诉。半数(51%)的患者表现为未完全恢复。未完全恢复与受伤后立即出现头痛(OR 3.27,95%CI 1.28 至 8.34)、年龄(OR 1.02,95%CI 1.00 至 1.05)和创伤后主诉数量(OR 1.24,95%CI 1.09 至 1.40)以及受伤后 2 周时的抑郁(OR 6.31,95%CI 1.24 至 32.00)有关。单纯头部损伤患者与轻度创伤性脑损伤患者之间的未完全恢复率无差异(55%比 50%,95%CI-12.5 至-23.0)。共有 36 名 MHI 患者(28%)因头部损伤相关主诉就诊于普通医生。
3 个月后,非住院治疗的 MHI 患者中,有一半经历了未完全恢复,单纯头部损伤患者与轻度创伤性脑损伤患者之间无差异。因此,必须在急诊科早期识别有未完全恢复风险的患者,以提供适当的后续护理,避免长期创伤后主诉。