2019
DOI: 10.3390/medsci7010012
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Prehospital and Emergency Care in Adult Patients with Acute Traumatic Brain Injury

Abstract: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major healthcare problem and a major burden to society. The identification of a TBI can be challenging in the prehospital setting, particularly in elderly patients with unobserved falls. Errors in triage on scene cannot be ruled out based on limited clinical diagnostics. Potential new mobile diagnostics may decrease these errors. Prehospital care includes decision-making in clinical pathways, means of transport, and the degree of prehospital treatment. Emergency care at hospit… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 81 publications
(88 reference statements)
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“… 7 Neurological assessment including GCS, pupil reaction and signs of asymmetry performed repeatedly in the prehospital and emergency room setting is crucial to assess TBI severity and secondary deterioration due to intracranial complications with the need of a neurosurgical intervention. 23 It is therefore very reassuring that this was also found to be substantially improved in our study, with GCS being recorded in 94.5% of the patients when an emergency physician was present at the accident site.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“… 7 Neurological assessment including GCS, pupil reaction and signs of asymmetry performed repeatedly in the prehospital and emergency room setting is crucial to assess TBI severity and secondary deterioration due to intracranial complications with the need of a neurosurgical intervention. 23 It is therefore very reassuring that this was also found to be substantially improved in our study, with GCS being recorded in 94.5% of the patients when an emergency physician was present at the accident site.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…Advanced airway management at the scene [42] using orotracheal intubation in those TBIs with a low GCS score, presence of convulsions, agitation, or in case of situations with other associated trauma, is a recognized practice approved by current brain injury treatment guides [43,44]. Similarly, the appropriate handling of hypotension from the initial moments helps to prevent secondary injuries and maintain adequate cerebral perfusion pressure [5,45,46]. The use of advanced measures at the scene for high-risk patients directly influences short-term (admission to ICU and early mortality) and long-term evolution (mitigation of after-effects) [47,48].…”
Section: Managing Prehospital Traumatic Brain Injury (Tbi)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TBI management begins at the prehospital care, assuring that the patient has no signs of upper airway obstruction, maintaining Oxygen saturation (spO 2 ) > 90% and considering intubation in patients that presents Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) < 9, altered swallowing reflex or contributing to hypoventilation [60,[62][63][64]. However, it is of substantial value that the prehospital team is technically qualified (within technical skills, medical devices/medication, and protocols) to perform airway management and control possible detrimental effects of therapeutic interventions (such as worsening of cervical spine injury during endotracheal intubation [65]).…”
Section: Prehospital Care and Oxygenationmentioning
confidence: 99%