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Traumatic brain injury and intraparenchymal hemorrhage progression: Blood pressure variability matters

Authors :
Cecilia Tran
Hannah Frederick
Hammad Baqai
Matthew Fairchild
Julianna Solomon
Ayah Aligabi
Joshua Olexa
Uttam Bodanapally
Gary Schwartzbauer
Quincy K. Tran
Source :
The American journal of emergency medicine. 52
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Blood pressure variability (BPV) has been shown to correlate with intraparenchymal hematoma progression (HP) and worse outcomes in patients with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH). However, this association has not been elucidated in patients with traumatic intraparenchymal hemorrhage or contusion (tIPH). We hypothesized that 24 h-BPV from time of admission is associated with hemorrhagic progression of contusion or intraparenchymal hemorrhage (HPC), and worse outcomes in patients with tIPH.We performed a retrospective observational analysis of adult patients treated at an academic regional Level 1 trauma center between 01/2018-12/2019. We included patients who had tIPH and ≥ 2 computer tomography (CT) scans within 24 h of admission. HP, defined as ≥30% of admission hematoma volume, was calculated by the ABC/2 method. We performed stepwise multivariable logistic regressions for the association between clinical factors and outcomes.We analyzed 354 patients' charts. Mean age (Standard Deviation [SD]) was 56 (SD = 21) years, 260 (73%) were male. Mean admission hematoma volume was 7 (SD =19) cubic centimeters (cmSBP

Details

ISSN :
15328171
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of emergency medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6907105442c90d7daf8bff91d8c9211c