The urgent postoperative CT scan: a critical appraisal of its impact

2001 
Urgent CT scanning of critically ill neurosurgical patients is costly, labour intensive and associated with some risk. A study of urgent postoperative CT scans was carried out to assess the proportion that changed patient management. A further study evaluated the accuracy of predicting a haematoma. A retrospective analysis was carried out over a 6-month period of all scans performed within 48 h of craniotomy. This was followed by a prospective comparison between the surgeon's estimate of the chance of a haematoma on the scan and the scan result. Of 184 patient undergoing craniotomy, 40 patients (22%) were scanned within 48 h. Five patients were re-operated for haematoma formation. Prospective assessment showed that surgeons consistently over-estimated the risk at haematoma (mean prescan estimate 63%, actual risk 8%, p = 2.5 2 10 -12 ). Less than 1 in 10 postoperative scans show a neurosurgical target. Other changes in management following scanning were slight.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    7
    References
    12
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []