✓ Recent studies attempting to define the outcome from severe head injury have implied, directly or indirectly, that the severity of injury (as determined by the Glasgow Coma Scale (GSC)) is the sole determinant of outcome. Little attention has been focused on the type of lesion that causes the low GCS score, and there exists an unstated hypothesis that the lesion type is not an important determinant of outcome. No attempt has been made to determine whether patients who have the same GCS score caused by different lesions have the same or different outcomes. Since this is impossible to test without a large number of cases, data were obtained from seven head-injury centers on patients who fulfilled the Glasgow criteria for severe head injury (GCS ≤ 8 for at least 6 hours). Patients were categorized according to a simple classification system comprising seven lesion types, each of which was further subdivided into two GCS score ranges (3 to 5 and 6 to 8). Of 1107 patients, the overall mortality was 41%, but ranged from 9% to 74% among the different lesion categories. Conversely, 26% had good recovery (at 3 months), but among the different lesion groups the range was 6% to 68%. Acute subdural hematoma with GCS scores of 3 to 5 was uniformly the worst problem (74% mortality and 8% good recovery), whereas diffuse injury coma of 6 to 24 hours with GCS scores of 6 to 8 had 9% mortality and 68% incidence of good recovery. Results of this study demonstrate marked heterogeneity within this severe head-injury group and point out that patients with the same GCS score have markedly different outcomes, depending on the causative lesion. The type of lesion is thus as important a factor in determining outcome as is the GCS score, and both must be considered when describing severely head-injured patients.
This article reports the outcomes of 654 consecutive patients treated during a 4.5-year period. Patients had a microdiscectomy, a laminectomy plus microdiscectomy, or a decompressive laminectomy with a microdiscectomy. The causes of ruptured discs were lifting (31.4%), falls (10.2%), and sports (10.0%). Almost all patients had complained of leg pain (99%), and 79% had radicular pain in a dermatomal distribution. Thirty-three percent of the patients had been involved in industrial accidents, and 6% had legal claims pending during the surgical period. Almost 11% of the patients had complications, and there was one death caused by abdominal arterial bleeding. Patients were also rated according to the Prolo Functional-Economic Outcome Rating Scale to improve the ability to compare series in the future. Almost 80% of the patients had good outcomes as defined by scores on this scale of 8 (16.2%), 9 (33.2%), and 10 (26.9%). Several conclusions can be drawn from the results of this series: 1) most patients had good outcomes; 2) patients with nonindustrial injuries had better outcomes than did patients with industrial injuries; 3) professionals with legal concerns and laborers with industrial insurance had good outcomes; and 4) the Functional-Economic Outcome Rating Scale appears to be a useful tool for comparing different procedures more objectively and for comparing the outcomes across series.
To determine the efficacy of early jejunal hyperalimentation as nutritional support in the head-injured patient, 32 head-injured patients with Glasgow Coma Scale scores less than 10 were studied for the first 7 days after injury. The experimental (E) group had nasojejunal feeding tubes placed fluoroscopically. Within 36 hours of injury, they received nutritional support equal to their measured resting energy expenditure. The control (C) group was fed gastrically when bowel sounds returned. There were no significant differences (P > 0.05) in age, Glasgow Coma Scale score, type of neurological injury, or associated injuries between the two groups. The mean resting energy expenditure, serum albumin, glucose, lymphocyte count, body weight, and total nitrogen loss were nearly identical for both groups. With the jejunal feedings, daily caloric (E = 2102 kcal versus C = 1100 kcal) and nitrogen intake (E = 11.1 g versus C = 5.6 g) and daily nitrogen balance (E = -4.3 g versus C = -11,8 g) improved. The incidence of bacterial infections (E = 3 versus C = 14) and days of intensive care unit hospitalization (E = 6 versus C = 10) were significantly reduced (P < .05). Headinjured patients will tolerate early jejunal hyperalimentation despite the presence of a clinically silent abdomen, and the cost and complications of total parenteral nutrition are avoided. The increased caloric and nitrogen intake and improved nitrogen retention markedly reduced infections and days of stay in the intensive care unit. (Neurosurgery 25:729-735, 1989)
This article reports the outcomes of 654 consecutive patients treated during a 4.5-year period. Patients had a microdiscectomy, a laminectomy plus microdiscectomy, or a decompressive laminectomy with a microdiscectomy. The causes of ruptured discs were lifting (31.4%), falls (10.2%), and sports (10.0%). Almost all patients had complained of leg pain (99%), and 79% had radicular pain in a dermatomal distribution. Thirty-three percent of the patients had been involved in industrial accidents, and 6% had legal claims pending during the surgical period. Almost 11% of the patients had complications, and there was one death caused by abdominal arterial bleeding. Patients were also rated according to the Prolo Functional-Economic Outcome Rating Scale to improve the ability to compare series in the future. Almost 80% of the patients had good outcomes as defined by scores on this scale of 8 (16.2%), 9 (33.2%), and 10 (26.9%). Several conclusions can be drawn from the results of this series: 1) most patients had good outcomes; 2) patients with nonindustrial injuries had better outcomes than did patients with industrial injuries; 3) professionals with legal concerns and laborers with industrial insurance had good outcomes; and 4) the Functional-Economic Outcome Rating Scale appears to be a useful tool for comparing different procedures more objectively and for comparing the outcomes across series.
The presence of traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage (tSAH) on admission computerized tomography (CT) scans obtained from patients suffering from severe, nonpenetrating head injury has been shown to be associated with a worse outcome than the injury alone would warrant. However, no previous study has provided a simple means of relating the amount of tSAH, its location, or other abnormal findings on initial head CT scans to outcome in patients with non-penetrating head injury. In this study, admission head CT scans from 252 patients with tSAH, treated at a single institution, were reviewed to ascertain thickness of the tSAH; its location; evidence of mass lesion(s); shift of midline structures (< or = 5 mm vs. > 5 mm); basal cistern effacement; and cortical sulcal effacement. The CT scans were then organized into Grades 1 to 4 with 1 indicating thin tSAH (< or = 5 mm); 2, thick tSAH (> 5 mm); 3, thin tSAH with mass lesion(s); and 4, thick tSAH with mass lesion(s). A stepwise regression analysis of CT features ranked them in descending order of contribution to Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) scores at the time of discharge from acute hospitalization as follows: basal cistern effacement, thickness of tSAH, cortical sulcal effacement, presence of mass lesion(s), and location of tSAH. A shift of midline structures was not found to be a significant variable. Further analysis comparing CT grades and admission postresuscitation Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores was highly significant. Patients with lower CT grades had better admission GCS values and discharge GOS scores than those with higher CT grades. From their experience, the authors conclude that their CT grading scale is simple and reliable and relates significantly to outcome at the time of discharge from acute hospitalization.
Forty-five acute head trauma patients were randomized into a neurotrauma nutritional study to compare the efficacy of two forms of standard nutritional supplementation; namely total parenteral nutrition (TPN) versus enteral nutrition (NG). Forty patients were male, 5 were female, with a median age of 28 years. The mean admitting Glasgow coma scale score was 5.8. Patients were given high calorie and nitrogen feedings for the 14 days of the study period in an attempt to achieve positive calorie and nitrogen balance. TPN patients had significantly higher mean daily nitrogen intakes (P less than 0.01) and mean daily nitrogen losses (P less than 0.001) than the NG fed patients; however, no significant differences were discovered with respect to maintenance of serum albumin levels, weight loss, the incidence of infection, nitrogen balance, and final outcome. The exaggerated nitrogen excretion experienced by patients fed large nitrogen loads illustrates a problem in achieving nitrogen equilibrium in acute head injured patients.
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