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- Stephen Flaherty, Saptarshi Biswas, Dorraine D Watts, Nina Y Wilson, Yan Shen, Jeneva M Garland, Ransom J Wyse, Mark J Lieser, Therèse M Duane, Patrick J Offner, Joseph D Love, William C Shillinglaw, Darrell L Hunt, Randy W Gauny, Samir M Fakhry, and Delayed TBI Hemorrhage Research Group.
- Department of Surgery, Del Sol Medical Center, El Paso, TX.
- Ann Emerg Med. 2023 Mar 1; 81 (3): 364374364-374.
Study ObjectiveEvaluate the utility of routine rescanning of older, mild head trauma patients with an initial negative brain computed tomography (CT), who is on a preinjury antithrombotic (AT) agent by assessing the rate of delayed intracranial hemorrhage (dICH), need for surgery, and attributable mortality.MethodsParticipating centers were trained and provided data collection instruments per institutional review board-approved protocols. Data were obtained from manual chart review and electronic medical record download. Adults ≥55 years seen at Level I/II Trauma Centers, between 2017 and 2019 with suspected head trauma, Glasgow Coma Scale 14 to 15, negative initial brain CT, and no other Abbreviated Injury Scale injuries >2 were identified, grouped by preinjury AT therapy (AT- or AT+) and compared on dICH rate, need for operative neurosurgical intervention, and attributable mortality using univariate analysis (α=.05).ResultsA total of 2,950 patients from 24 centers were enrolled; 280 (9.5%) had a repeat brain CT. In those rescanned, the dICH rate was 15/126 (11.9%) for AT- and 6/154 (3.9%) in AT+. Assuming nonrescanned patients did not suffer clinically meaningful dICH, the dICH rate would be 15/2001 (0.7%) for AT- and 6/949 (0.6%) for AT+. No surgical operations were done for dICH. All-cause mortality was 9/2950 (0.3%) and attributable mortality was 1/2950 (0.03%). The attributable death was an AT+, dICH patient whose family declined intervention.ConclusionIn older patients with an initial Glasgow Coma Scale of 14 to 15 and a negative initial brain CT scan, the dICH rate is low (<1%) and of minimal clinical consequence, regardless of AT use. In addition, no patient had operative neurosurgical intervention. Therefore, routine rescanning is not supported based on the results of this study.Copyright © 2022 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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