Authors
Flora S Park, Jeffry Nahmias, Sebastian Schubl, Lourdes Swentek, Yigit Guner, Laura F Goodman, Brent Emigh, Areg Grigorian
Publication date
2024/4
Journal
The American Surgeon™
Volume
90
Issue
4
Pages
882-886
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Background
Recent evidence suggests that routine intubation upon arrival for adults with isolated head trauma and a depressed Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score is associated with increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Whether these outcomes are similar within an adolescent trauma population has not been previously investigated. We hypothesized intubation upon arrival for adolescent trauma patients with isolated head trauma to be associated with a higher risk of death and prolonged length of stay (LOS).
Methods
The 2017-2019 TQIP was queried for adolescents (age 12-16) presenting after isolated blunt head trauma (abbreviated injury scale [AIS] <1 spine/chest/abdomen/upper-extremity/lower-extremity) and GCS 6-8 on arrival. Transferred patients, dead-on-arrival, and those undergoing emergent operation from the emergency department were excluded. Patients intubated within one-hour were …
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