首页> 外文期刊>Prehospital emergency care >Survival in Out-of-hospital Rapid Sequence Intubation of Non-Traumatic Brain Pathologies
【24h】

Survival in Out-of-hospital Rapid Sequence Intubation of Non-Traumatic Brain Pathologies

机译:非创伤性脑病理论的医院外序插管的存活

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Introduction: Rapid sequence intubation (RSI) is not only used in traumatic brain injuries in the out-of-hospital setting, but also for non-traumatic brain pathologies (NTBP) such as brain tumors, meningitis, encephalitis, hypoxic/anoxic brain injury, stroke, arteriovenous malformations, tumors, aneurysms, brain hemorrhage, as well as brain injury due to diabetes, seizures and toxicity, metabolic conditions, and alcohol and drug overdose. Previous research suggests that RSI is common in non-traumatic coma, but with an unknown prevalence of NTBP in those that receive RSI. If NTBP is common and if brain trauma RSI evidence is not valid for NTBP then a sizable proportion of NTBP receive this treatment without evidence of benefit. This study calculated the out-of-hospital NTBP prevalence in patients that had received RSI and explored factors that predicted survival. Methods: A retrospective cohort study based on data collected from an ambulance service and seven hospitals based in Melbourne, Australia. Non-traumatic brain pathologies were defined using ICD10-AM codes for the calculation of NTBP prevalence. Logistic regression modelled out-of-hospital predictors of survival to hospital discharge after adjustment for comorbidities. Results: The seven participating hospitals treated 2,277 patients that received paramedic RSI for all illnesses and indications from January 1, 2008 to December 31, 2015, with survival data available for 1,940 (85%). Of the 1,940, 1,125 (58%) patients had at least one hospital-diagnosed NTBP. Sixty-nine percent all of NTBP survived to hospital discharge, compared to 65% for traumatic intracranial injury. Strokes were the most common and had poor survival to discharge (37%) compared to the second most common NTBP toxicity/toxic encephalopathy that had very high survival (98%). No out-of-hospital clinical intervention or prehospital time interval predicted survival. Factors that did predict survival include Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), duration of mechanical ventilation, age, ICU length of stay, and comorbidities. Conclusions: Non-traumatic brain pathologies are seven times more prevalent than traumatic brain injuries in patients that underwent out-of-hospital RSI in Victoria, Australia. Since the mechanisms through which RSI impacts mortality might differ between traumatic brain injuries and NTBP, and given that NTBP is very prevalent, it follows that the use of RSI in NTBP could be unsupported.
机译:简介:快速序列插管(RSI)不仅用于医院外设定的创伤性脑损伤,还用于非创伤性​​脑病理(NTBP),如脑肿瘤,脑膜炎,脑炎,缺氧/缺氧脑损伤,中风,动脉畸形,肿瘤,动脉瘤,脑出血,以及由于糖尿病,癫痫发作和毒性,代谢条件和酒精和药物过量而导致的脑损伤。以前的研究表明,RSI在非创伤性昏迷中是常见的,但在接收RSI的那些中有未知的NTBP普遍存在。如果NTBP是常见的,如果脑创伤RSI证据对NTBP无效,那么NTBP的可达比例的比例就收到了这种治疗,而没有受益的证据。本研究计算了接受RSI的患者的医院内NTBP患病率,并探讨了预测生存的因素。方法:基于南澳大利亚墨尔本救护车服务和七家医院收集的数据的回顾性队列研究。使用ICD10-AM码来定义非创伤性脑病理,用于计算NTBP患病率。逻辑回归在调整合并症后,在医院放电建模的医院存活者。结果:七家参与医院治疗了2,277名患者,接受了2008年1月1日至2015年12月31日的所有疾病和适应症的护理人员RSI,可提供8,940(85%)的生存数据。 1,940,1125(58%)患者至少有一个医院诊断的NTBP。所有NTBP百分之六十九个百分之一到医院排放,而创伤性颅内损伤的65%相比。中风是最常见的,与具有非常高存活的第二个最常见的NTBP毒性/有毒脑病(98%)相比,排出的存活差(37%)。没有医院外的临床干预或预孢子时间间隔预测生存。预测生存的因素包括格拉斯哥昏迷规模(GCS),机械通气持续时间,年龄,ICU住院时间和合并症。结论:非创伤性脑病理论比在澳大利亚维多利亚州维多利亚州的医院rsi患者的创伤性脑损伤,这是普遍存在的七倍。由于RSI影响死亡率的机制可能在创伤性脑损伤和NTBP之间有所不同,并且鉴于NTBP非常普遍,因此可以不支持在NTBP中使用RSI。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号