J Trauma
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Historical Article
Spent bullets and their injuries: the result of firing weapons into the sky.
People often celebrate holidays by firing guns into the air without realizing that this can cause serious injury or death. The present study identified 118 patients treated since 1985 who were hit with spent bullets. ⋯ The mortality rate was 32%, which is significantly higher than for all gunshot wound victims in general seen at the same medical center. Laws have been enacted to help prevent people shooting into the sky, but more education and enforcement are required to prevent these serious and preventable injuries.
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The incidence of rib fractures secondary to trauma has not been clearly reported. Of the 7147 patients seen by our trauma service from January 1987 to June 1992, 711 (10%) had rib fractures. ⋯ Thirty-five percent of the patients required discharge to an extended care facility and 35% developed a pulmonary complication. We conclude that rib fractures are a marker of severe injury in which (1) 12% will die because of their injuries, (2) more than 90% will have associated injuries, (3) one half will require operative and ICU care, (4) one third will develop pulmonary complications, and (5) one third will require discharge to an extended care facility.
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To develop a statistically valid method for trauma reimbursement and quality assurance (QA) length-of-stay filters. This is needed because diagnosis related group (DRG)-based trauma payment systems assume a random sampling of injury severities from a normally distributed population and thus result in economic disincentives to level I trauma centers. ⋯ These models provide a valid method of reimbursement for MSI trauma for level I trauma centers, since the data imply that good care associated with survival from specific complications of MSI are the major determinants of COST, rather than the specific type of injury or the resultant ISS. Moreover, using survival and ISS plus the disease-related complications as determinants of LOS, this method can be applied to any U.S. region since local factors can be used to adjust hospital COST as a highly correlated function of LOS. This method also permits identification of LOS outliers for QA, taking into account the influence of injury complications.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of mortality, morbidity, and severity of 59,713 head injured patients with 114,447 patients with extracranial injuries.
An analysis of the completed Major Trauma Outcome Study (MTOS) data set was undertaken to compare the incidence, mortality, morbidity, and injury severity of patients with head injuries (HI) with those of patients with extracranial injuries (ECI). The MTOS was completed recently after data from 174,160 patients submitted from 165 trauma centers from 1982 through 1989 were collated and validated. Data were analyzed with regard to the effect of injury causation for vehicular-related, nonvehicular-related, and penetrating injuries for patients with HI, ECI, or both. ⋯ The overall MTOS mortality rate was 8.3%, but was three times higher in the HI group (14.5%) than in the NHI patients (5.1%). Injury severity measured by AIS-85 had, as expected, a profound influence on mortality of both HI and NHI groups. A similar high correlation was found between Glasgow Coma Scale score and mortality for head injured patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Acute brain injury followed by hemorrhagic shock (HEM) causes prohibitive mortality in trauma patients because these combined events lead to low cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral oxygen delivery (co2del). Proper treatment therefore requires rapid correction of cerebral perfusion deficits. Previous studies have shown that hypertonic crystalloid resuscitation significantly improves CBF and co2del in a model of brain injury and HEM when compared to lactated Ringer's (LR) solution. ⋯ Swine were randomized to receive either hypertonic sodium lactate (HSL) or LR fluid resuscitation. The HSL resuscitation produced a significant and sustained elevation in cerebral perfusion pressure and pial arteriole diameter (p < 0.05), and a sustained elevation in CBF after brain injury and HEM when compared with LR. These data suggest that hypertonic fluid resuscitation following brain injury and HEM improves CBF, at least in part, by causing vasodilation of cerebral resistance vessels.