Injury
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Rib fractures are one of the most frequent causes of morbidity following blunt injury to the chest. Many of these patients require ICU care and often develop pulmonary complications. Prior studies have attempted to identify changes in predicted lung volumes or utilized the number of rib fractures to guide clinical decisions. A rib fracture triage pathway was developed to identify which patients will benefit from ICU level of care and shorten hospital length of stay for patients that do not require ICU care. ⋯ Developing a rib fracture treatment and triage pathway can decrease ICU and hospital resource utilization and decrease pulmonary complications without increase in readmissions or mortality. Patients are more likely to be discharge home over a skilled nursing facility further decreasing health care cost. Level of Evidence IV Retrospective Study, Prognostic.
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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) prognostic prediction models offer value to individualized treatment planning, systematic outcome assessments and clinical research design but require continuous external validation to ensure generalizability to different settings. The Corticosteroid Randomization After Significant Head Injury (CRASH) and International Mission on Prognosis and Analysis on Clinical Trials in TBI (IMPACT) models are widely available but lack robust assessments of performance in a current national sample of patients. The purpose of this study is to assess the performance of the CRASH-Basic and IMPACT-Core models in predicting in-hospital mortality using a nationwide retrospective cohort from the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB). ⋯ Both CRASH-Basic and IMPACT-Core accurately predict in-hospital mortality following moderate-severe TBI, and IMPACT-Core performs well beyond its original GCS cut-off of 12, indicating potential utility for mild TBI (GCS 13-15). By demonstrating validity in the NTDB, these models appear generalizable to new data and offer value to current practice in diverse settings as well as to large-scale research design.
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Notwithstanding advances in medical and surgical management of flail chest, its morbidity and mortality rates are still high. Aim of this study is to compare three approaches for parietal thoracic stabilization by analyzing both early and long-term patient outcomes. ⋯ Plate and strut fixation revealed a lower rate of postoperative morbidity and mortality. Wires stabilization was characterized for a reduction of operative time.
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Observational Study
Embedded rehabilitation in major trauma: Retrospective pre-post observational study of service and patient outcomes.
Major trauma describes serious and often multiple injuries where there is a strong possibility of death or residual disability. There is little robust evidence on the effects of embedded rehabilitation within the trauma care pathway. Trauma rehabilitation services therefore remain fragmented and poorly integrated. This study aimed to determine changes in hospital length of stay (LoS), intensive care unit (ICU) LoS, 30-day mortality and Glasgow Outcome Scale following implementation of an embedded rehabilitation service into a Major Trauma Centre (MTC). ⋯ Embedded rehabilitation is an important and necessary component of an effective trauma system that is associated with improved service and patient outcomes. Future research should examine prospectively how a dedicated rehabilitation service affects medium- and long-term patient-centred outcomes.
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Neck injuries are an important cause of combat mortality and morbidity. This study's objective was to examine the characteristics and causes of neck injuries among Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and emphasize the best treatment protocols for the advanced life support providers in the prehospital combat environment. ⋯ Level III (Retrospective study with up to two negative criteria).