The effect of associated injuries, blood loss, and oxygen debt on death and disability in blunt traumatic brain injury: the need for early physiologic predictors of severity.

1995 
ABSTRACT Studies of 4590 patients with blunt trauma injuries admitted to a Level I Trauma Center, have shown that 37% had a blunt traumatic brain injury (BTBI). Of these brain injured patients 60% has an associated other injury. Examination of mortality has shown that those with an isolated brain injury had an 11% mortality compared with 21.8% in those with an associated systemic injury. Further investigation demonstrated that the cause of the increased mortality was related to the blood loss associated with the injuries and that when hypovolemic shock resulted, mortality rose from 12.8 to 62%. The severity of the associated injuries effect on the brain injured patient could be estimated by a parameter of oxygen debt, the base deficit and this allowed for a quantitative estimate of the probability of death as an index of severity. A combined linear logistic model using the admission Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) as a measure of brain injury and the base deficit as a measure of physiologic injury provides such ...
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