Emergency Department, Nuovo Santa Chiara Hospital, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana, Pisa, Italy.
Intermediate Care Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, Hospital Alto Vicentino, Santorso, Italy.
Intern Emerg Med. 2023 Aug;18(5):1533-1541. doi: 10.1007/s11739-023-03244-5. Epub 2023 Mar 3.
Currently, all patients, regardless of the type of head injury, should undergo a head computerized tomography (CT) if on oral anticoagulant therapy. The aim of the study was to assess the different incidences of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) between patients with minor head injury (mHI) and patients with mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) and whether there were differences in the risk of death at 30 days as a result of trauma or neurosurgery. A retrospective multicenter observational study was conducted from January 1, 2016, to February 1, 2020. All patients on DOACs therapy who suffered head trauma and underwent a head CT were extracted from the computerized databases. Patients were divided into two groups MTBI vs mHI all in DOACs treatment. Whether a difference in the incidence of post-traumatic ICH was present was investigated, and pre- and post-traumatic risk factors were compared between the two groups to assess the possible association with ICH risk by propensity score matching. 1425 with an MTBI in DOACs were enrolled. Of these, 80.1% (1141/1425) had an mHI and 19.9% (284/1425) had an MTBI. Of these, 16.5% (47/284) patients with MTBI and 3.3% (38/1141) with mHI reported post-traumatic ICH. After propensity score matching, ICH was consistently found to be more associated with patients with MTBI than with mHI (12.5% vs 5.4%, p = 0.027). Risk factors associated with immediate ICH in mHI patients were high energy impact, previous neurosurgery, trauma above the clavicles, post-traumatic vomiting and headache. Patients on MTBI (5.4%) were found to be more associated with ICH than those with mHI (0.0%, p = 0.002). also when the need for neurosurgery or death within 30 days were considered. Patients on DOACs with mHI have a lower risk of presenting with post-traumatic ICH than patients with MTBI. Furthermore, patients with mHI have a lower risk of death or neurosurgery than patients with MTBI, despite the presence of ICH.
目前,如果正在接受口服抗凝治疗,所有头部外伤患者,无论头部外伤类型如何,均应进行头部计算机断层扫描(CT)检查。本研究旨在评估轻微头部损伤(mHI)和轻度创伤性脑损伤(MTBI)患者之间颅内出血(ICH)发生率的差异,以及由于创伤或神经外科治疗,30 天内死亡的风险是否存在差异。这是一项回顾性多中心观察性研究,于 2016 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 2 月 1 日进行。从计算机数据库中提取了所有正在接受 DOAC 治疗并遭受头部创伤且接受头部 CT 检查的患者。将患者分为 MTBI 组和 mHI 组,两组均接受 DOAC 治疗。研究调查了创伤后 ICH 发生率是否存在差异,并比较了两组患者的创伤前和创伤后危险因素,以通过倾向评分匹配评估其与 ICH 风险的可能相关性。共纳入 1425 例接受 DOAC 治疗的 MTBI 患者。其中,80.1%(1141/1425)患者为 mHI,19.9%(284/1425)患者为 MTBI。其中,16.5%(284/1425)MTBI 患者和 3.3%(38/1141)mHI 患者报告创伤后 ICH。经过倾向评分匹配后,ICH 与 MTBI 患者比 mHI 患者更相关(12.5%比 3.3%,p=0.027)。mHI 患者ICH 的即时相关危险因素为高能冲击、既往神经外科手术、锁骨以上创伤、创伤后呕吐和头痛。与 mHI 患者(0.0%)相比,MTBI 患者(5.4%)ICH 发生率更高(p=0.002),且需要神经外科手术或 30 天内死亡的患者也更多。接受 DOAC 治疗的 mHI 患者发生创伤后 ICH 的风险低于 MTBI 患者。此外,尽管存在 ICH,但 mHI 患者的死亡或神经外科手术风险低于 MTBI 患者。