Patients who reattend after head injury: a high risk group
- 25 November 1995
- Vol. 311 (7017) , 1395-1398
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.311.7017.1395
Abstract
Objective: To assess risk factors for important neurosurgical effects in patients who reattend after head injury. Design: Retrospective study. Subjects: 606 patients who reattended a trauma unit after minor head injury. Main outcome measures: Intracranial abnormality detected on computed tomography or the need for neurosurgical intervention. Results: Five patients died: two from unrelated causes and three from raised intracranial pressure. On multiple regression analysis the only significant predictor for both abnormality on computed tomography (14.4% of reattenders) and the need for operation (5% of reattenders) was vault fracture seen on the skull radiograph (P-6); predictors for abnormal computed tomogram were a Glasgow coma scale score -6). On contingency table analysis these associations were confirmed. In addition significant associations with both abnormality on computed tomography and operation were focal neurological abnormality, weakness, or speech disturbance. Amnesia or loss of consciousness at the time of initial injury, personality change, and seizures were significantly associated only with abnormality on computed tomography. Headache, dizziness, nausea, and vomiting were common in reattenders but were found to have no independent significance. Conclusions: All patients who reattend after head injury should undergo computed tomography as at least 14% of scans can be expected to yield positive results. Where this facility is not available patients with predictors for operation should be urgently referred for neurosurgical opinion. Other patients can be readmitted and need referral only if symptoms persist despite symptomatic treatment or there is neurological deterioration while under observation. These patients are a high risk group and should be treated seriously.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prognostic signs in the evaluation of patients with minor head injuryBritish Journal of Surgery, 1993
- Clinical Predictors of Abnormality Disclosed by Computed Tomography after Mild Head TraumaNeurosurgery, 1993
- Inadequacy of Bedside Clinical Indicators in Identifying Significant Intracranial Injury in Trauma PatientsPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1992
- Are CT Scans for Head Injury Patients Always Necessary?Published by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1991
- Risks of acute traumatic intracranial haematoma in children and adults: implications for managing head injuries.BMJ, 1990
- Skull X-Ray Examinations after Head TraumaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Assessment of minimal head-injuries: indications for in-hospital care.1974