Pa. Jones et al., MEASURING THE BURDEN OF SECONDARY INSULTS IN HEAD-INJURED PATIENTS DURING INTENSIVE-CARE, Journal of neurosurgical anesthesiology, 6(1), 1994, pp. 4-14
Primary traumatic brain damage may be compounded by secondary pathophy
siological insults that can occur soon after trauma, during transfer t
o hospital or subsequent treatment of the head-injured patient. The ai
m of this prospective study was to quantify the burden of a wide range
of secondary insults occurring after head injury and to relate these
to 12-month outcome. In 124 adult head-injured patients studied during
intensive care using a computerized data collection system, less-than
-or-equal-to 14 clinically indicated physiological variables were meas
ured minute-by-minute. Verified values falling outside threshold limit
s for greater-than-or-equal-to 5 min, as defined by the Edinburgh Univ
ersity Secondary Insult Grading scheme, were analysed by insult grade
and duration. A greater incidence of secondary insults was detected th
an previous studies have indicated. Insults were found in 91% of patie
nts and occurred in all severities of head trauma, at all ages, and at
every level of Injury Severity Score (ISS). The cumulative durations
were much greater than previously recorded although 85% of the total t
ime was at the least severe grade. Short duration insults were common.
In 71 patients, in whom 8 insults could be assessed (intracranial pre
ssure, arterial hypo- and hypertension, cerebral perfusion pressure, h
ypoxemia, pyrexia, brady- and tachycardia), outcome at 12 months was a
nalysed using logistic regression to determine the relative influence
of age, admission Glasgow Coma Sumscore, ISS, pupil response on admiss
ion, and insult duration on both mortality and morbidity. The most sig
nificant predictors of mortality in this patient set were durations of
hypotensive (p = .0064), pyrexic (p = .0 1 37), and hypoxemic (p = .0
244) insults. When good versus poor outcome was considered, hypotensiv
e insults (p = .0118) and pupil response on admission (p = .0226) were
significant.