Predictive factors of early death in patients with craniocerebral injury

Objective The predictive factors of early death in patients with craniocerebral injury (CI) were analyzed to provide a reference for clinical treatment. Methods Collected clinical data from 1 102 patients with craniocerebral injury and admitted into the Department of Neurological Surgery, Fir...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: LIU Jia-wei, ZHANG Yi, WANG Kai, MA Wen-juan
Format: Article
Language:zho
Published: Institute of Basic Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences / Peking Union Medical College. 2021-12-01
Series:Jichu yixue yu linchuang
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal11.magtechjournal.com/Jwk_jcyxylc/fileup/1001-6325/PDF/a200922.pdf
Description
Summary:Objective The predictive factors of early death in patients with craniocerebral injury (CI) were analyzed to provide a reference for clinical treatment. Methods Collected clinical data from 1 102 patients with craniocerebral injury and admitted into the Department of Neurological Surgery, First Affiliated Hospital of Shaanxi University of Chinese Medicine from January 2014 to December 2019, and analyzed the correlation of general data, injuries, and auxiliary examinations that may affect patients' early death, Using multi-factor Logistic regression analysis to influence the predictive factors of early death in patients with craniocerebral injury. Results Among them, 104 CI patients died after early rescue, accounting for 9.4% of the total number. Abnormal pupil responses (OR=4.669, P<0.05), midline shift (OR=7.898, P<0.001), brain herniation (OR=8.013, P<0.001),lower GCS score (OR=3.847, P<0.001), multiple trauma (OR=6.354, P<0.01), coagulopathy (OR=5.281, P<0.01), and abnormal blood sugar (OR=6.574, P<0.01) are risk factors for early death. Conclusions Patients with low GCS score, slow or absent pupil light reflex, midline deviation, cerebral hernia, abnormal blood glucose and abnormal blood coagulation and multiple injuries are predictive factors for early death of craniocerebral injury, early intervention is encouraged as a tackling to the challenge.
ISSN:1001-6325