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As the number of preventable trauma-related deaths plateaus as a result of trauma system development, new directions for quality improvement in trauma care must come from analyzing morbidity with standardized methods to establish thresholds for provider-related and disease-specific complications. To establish such thresholds and determine priorities for improvements in quality all trauma patients who died, who were admitted to the ICU or OR, who were hospitalized for more than 3 days, or who were interfacility transfers to an academic trauma service, were concurrently evaluated for 1 year. All complication events were defined, reviewed, tabulated, and classified using 135 categories of complications. These categories were subdivided into provider-specific and disease-specific complications. Provider-related complications were classified as justified or unjustified to allow identification of events with a potential for improvement. A total of 1108 patients were admitted (mean ISS, 17); there were 97 deaths. Three potentially preventable deaths were identified, 857 complication events were identified, and 285 provider-related complications were responsible for errors with potential for improvement in 59 events (21%). Disease-specific morbidity was primarily related to infection; pneumonia accounted for 36% of all infectious complications and systemic infection for only 8.6% of infectious complications. Organ failure and other major systemic complications occurred in 2%-8% of patients. This type of analysis forms the basis on which to determine thresholds of provider-specific and disease-specific morbidity in a trauma hospital and serves as a guide to direct efforts toward continuous quality improvement.
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PMID:An evaluation of provider-related and disease-related morbidity in a level I university trauma service: directions for quality improvement. 143 7

The records of 57 patients presenting with flail chest injury from 1981 through 1987 were reviewed to determine factors affecting morbidity and mortality. Fifteen patients (26%) had 8+ rib fractures with a unilateral flail and seven (12%) had multiple rib fractures with a bilateral flail. Thirty-two (56%) had moderate-severe pulmonary contusions and 44 (77%) required chest tubes for hemo-pneumothorax. Ventilatory assistance was used in 36 (63%). The major factors determining the need for ventilatory assistance were: an ISS greater than or equal to 23, blood transfusions in the first 24 hours, moderate-severe associated injuries (fractures, head injuries or truncal organs requiring operation), and shock on admission (p less than 0.001). An adverse outcome occurred in 15 (28%); nine required ventilatory assistance greater than or equal to 14 days and six died of sepsis with pneumonia. The main factors associated with an adverse outcome were: an ISS greater than or equal to 31 (p less than 0.001), moderate-severe associated injuries (p less than 0.001), and blood transfusions (p less than 0.005). Although the primary determinants of an adverse outcome were the associated injuries and blood loss, a bilateral flail (p less than 0.01) and age greater than or equal to 50 years (p less than 0.02) were contributing factors.
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PMID:The management of flail chest injury: factors affecting outcome. 225 56

Comparison with regard to the degree of injury, the survival time and the cause of death in 318 male subjects killed as pedestrians in road traffic as compared to 220 female accident casualties revealed appreciable sex-specific differences in some cases. The injuries suffered were less serious in relative terms in the women. Traumatizations of the ISS classes 10 to 20 and 20 to 30 were most prominent (about 20% in each case). In men, deaths predominated at ISS 75 with 30% to 40%. About 40% of the men died of a craniocerebral trauma, between 15% and 20% of a multiple or trunk trauma, just under 10% of pneumonia and between 5% and 10% of embolism or shock. In women, fatal craniocerebral trauma was very much rarer (26%), whereas secondary causes of death were present in more than 40%. In particular, the raised risk of embolism is to be emphasized (18% as compared to 7%). The results can be interpreted in the following terms, namely that women are more gravely endangered quod vitam in the presence of comparable accident injuries.
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PMID:[Comparative studies of the degree of trauma and cause of death in male and female traffic accident victims]. 281 83

The evaluation of forensic autopsy material from pedestrian accident casualties comprising more than 500 cases confirms that the tolerance of injuries greatly depends on age. Slightly to moderately severe injured persons with ISS values under 30 have a very much lower risk of death from comparable traumatizations in the third and fourth decade of life as compared to children and above all compared to elderly persons. In the case of 20 to 30 year olds, only just under 10% with such accident injuries die as compared to the percentage of deaths in infants is almost 30% and more than 50% in casualties over 70 years old. Longer survival times determine the fatal course. In casualties under 50 years old, the rate of complications (10%-15%) is relatively low, whereas it is about 40% in those over 50 years old. Embolism, pneumonia and protracted shock are at the forefront. The relative intolerance of injuries in elderly traffic accident casualties is essentially due to secondary complications.
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PMID:[Age-dependent injury tolerance exemplified by fatal pedestrian accidents]. 281 24

In contrast to other studies, a recent report from the authors' institution has shown a good prognosis for functional recovery in geriatric patients that survive trauma. Because most survivors regained their pre-injury function, the authors examined factors related to nonsurvival in this population of 82 consecutive blunt trauma victims older than the age of 65. Seventeen patients died (21%). Compared with survivors, nonsurvivors were older, had more severe overall injury, and had more severe head and neck trauma but did not differ in severity of trauma that did not involve the head and neck, number of body regions injured, mechanism of injury, or incidence of surgery after injury. Nonsurvivors experienced more frequent complications (82% vs. 33%, p less than 0.05), including a higher incidence of cardiac complications (53% vs. 15%, p less than 0.05) and ventilator dependence for 5 or more days (41% vs. 14%, p less than 0.05). Mortality rates were increased in patients who were 80 years of age or older compared with those ages 65-79 (46% vs. 10%, p less than 0.01), despite injury of similar severity. More frequent complications may contribute to an increased mortality rate in the older group, including an increased incidence of prolonged mechanical ventilation (36% vs. 12%, p less than 0.025), cardiac complications (54% vs. 10%, p less than 0.01), and pneumonia (36% vs. 16%, p less than 0.06). Severely injured patients (Injury Severity Score [ISS] greater than or equal to 25) older than 80 years old had a mortality rate of 80%, and the survivors required permanent nursing home care. Discriminant analysis yielded a reliable method of differentiating survivors from nonsurvivors based on age, ISS, and the presence of cardiac and septic complications. To assess the accuracy of the discriminant function, 61 consecutive patients admitted during 1985 were reviewed prospectively. Discriminant scoring predicted outcome correctly in 92% of these patients. A Geriatric Trauma Survival Score (GTSS) based on the discriminant function was calculated for each of the 143 patients studied and was highly correlated with mortality rate (r = 0.99, p less than 0.001). Thus, the GTSS may serve as a valuable tool for evaluating death in geriatric trauma victims. Furthermore, because complications are potentially avoidable and contribute to increased mortality rates, routine aggressive care for geriatric patients with moderate overall injury is indicated.
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PMID:Survival after trauma in geriatric patients. 368 9

A recent retrospective analysis of femur fractures concluded that early surgical fixation in patients who have sustained blunt thoracic trauma (AIS score for Thorax > or = 2) was a risk factor for postoperative pulmonary failure. We conducted a review of all femur fractures admitted to a level I trauma center from November, 1988 to May, 1993. Inclusion criteria were ISS > or = 18, mid-shaft femur fractures treated with reamed intramedullary fixation, and no mortalities secondary to head trauma or hemorrhagic shock. One hundred thirty-eight patients met these criteria. Four patient groups were created: N1--no thoracic trauma (AIS score for thorax < 2), and early surgical fixation (< 24 hours after injury, n = 49); N2--no thoracic trauma and delayed fixation (> or = 24 hours, n = 8); T1--thoracic trauma (AIS score for Thorax > or = 2) and early fixation (n = 56); T2--thoracic trauma and delayed fixation (n = 25). There were no significant differences in age, Injury Severity Score, or Glasgow Coma Scale score between the four groups. Mortality rate, length of stay (LOS), LOS in the TICU, and duration of mechanical ventilation tended to be greater in patients with delayed fracture fixation, however, this was not statistically significant. The N2 patients had a pneumonia rate of 38% compared with 10% in group N1 (p = 0.07). The T2 patients had a pneumonia rate of 48% compared with 14% in group T1 (p = 0.002).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Delayed surgical fixation of femur fractures is a risk factor for pulmonary failure independent of thoracic trauma. 793 1

Many ventilated trauma patients thought to have nosocomial pneumonia have pulmonary contusion or systemic inflammatory response syndrome with tracheobronchial colonization. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy with quantitative culture techniques of protected specimen brush (PSB; threshold 10(3) cfu/mL) or bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL; threshold 10(5) cfu/mL) can potentially eliminate the false positive cultures of the upper airway seen with routine sputum aspirates (RS). However, bronchoscopy is expensive, and routine use may not be cost effective. This prospective study evaluated the patient charges associated with bronchoscopy and quantitative cultures compared with RS for the diagnosis of nosocomial pneumonia. Specimens were obtained by RS, PSB, and BAL from the lower airway in 107 trauma patients (136 sets of triplicate cultures). All patients had clinical evidence suggestive of pneumonia (fever, leukocytosis, purulent sputum, abnormal roentgenographic findings). Typical oral flora were considered contaminants; no gram-negative specimens were excluded. Mean age was 40 years and mean ISS was 29. Seventy-eight percent had blunt injuries, 22% penetrating, and 42% had chest injuries. The incidence of nosocomial pneumonia according to each method was: RS-73%; PSB-34%; BAL-25%. Considering all charges involved (bronchoscopy, equipment, microbiologic analysis, and antibiotics), and based on a 14-day course of ceftazidime and vancomycin, the charges for PSB were 58% of RS, and charges for BAL were 43% of RS. We conclude that the charges associated with bronchoscopy are high, but can be offset by antibiotic savings. Side effects of unnecessary antibiotic therapy would be avoided. Further study is needed to determine the efficacy of PSB or BAL in trauma patients.
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PMID:Analysis of charges associated with diagnosis of nosocomial pneumonia: can routine bronchoscopy be justified? 796 68

Combination therapy for nosocomial pneumonia with a beta-lactam and aminoglycoside is widely accepted because of synergy and reduction of resistant bacteria. This prospective study of 109 trauma patients (94 blunt, 15 penetrating) with nosocomial pneumonia was performed in consecutive phases. In phase 1, patients were randomized to an anti-pseudomonal third-generation cephalosporin--cefoperazone or ceftazidime. Gentamicin was added to each regimen in phase 2. The mean age of the patients was 37 years, the mean ISS was 31, and there were no differences among the four treatment groups relative to associated injuries. Patients receiving monotherapy had a 56% cure rate compared with 31% for combination therapy (p < 0.04). Persistence rates were similar in these two groups (15% and 20%), but superinfection was significantly higher in the combination group (49% vs. 28%; p < 0.04). The predominant superinfecting organism was methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Nine patients died (5% monotherapy, 10% combination), and eight had a superinfection. We conclude that monotherapy had a higher cure rate than combination therapy for empiric therapy of pneumonia in our trauma patients. Combination therapy failed because of superinfection (primarily MRSA). Emergence of MRSA may be from host overgrowth or plasmid-mediated induction of resistance, possibly caused by gentamicin.
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PMID:Empiric monotherapy versus combination therapy of nosocomial pneumonia in trauma patients. 835 13

Varying institutional definitions and degrees of surveillance limit awareness of the true incidence of posttraumatic pulmonary complications. Prospective review with standardized definitions of 25 categories of pulmonary complications was applied to a university level I trauma service over 3 years to establish the true incidence. Potential injury-related predictors of individual complications were determined using multiple logistic regression analysis and adjusted odds ratios were calculated, thereby controlling for the effect of other covariants. Significance was attributed to p < 0.05. Of 3289 patients meeting MTOS criteria, pulmonary complications occurred in 368 (11.2%). Pulmonary complications account for one third of all disease complications. Significant associations with pneumonia included age, the presence of shock on admission, significant head injury, and surgery to the head and chest. Significant risk for atelectasis occurred in patients with blunt injury mechanism, ISS > 16, shock on admission, and severe head injury. Risks for development of respiratory failure included age > 55 years, the mechanism of "pedestrian struck", and the presence of significant head injury. Risk factors for ARDS included surgery to the head and a Trauma Score < 13 on arrival. Significant predictors for pulmonary embolism included ISS > 16, shock on admission, and extremity and pelvis injuries. The true incidence of pulmonary complications is established with this kind of analysis and focuses attention on (1) groups at high risk for developing complications, (2) groups for which current therapeutic modalities are still ineffective, and (3) defining the need to refocus on prospective research rather than ineffective processes of care.
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PMID:A risk analysis of pulmonary complications following major trauma. 841 Dec 74

Physicians, fearful of an increase in the incidence of intubation mishaps (IMs) and pulmonary complications (PUCs), have been reluctant to use paralysis and intubation (PI) outside the OR. This study examines the correlations between PI, IM, and PUC. Since 1987, we have used PI when complex injury or combative behavior warranted. From January through December 1989, 851 patients meeting major trauma triage guidelines were evaluated. The medical records of 231 patients (27%) who underwent PI within 8 hours of admission were reviewed; 27 patients were eliminated because of incomplete records. The indications for PI were emergency surgery (131), airway control (30), combativeness (24), and hyperventilation (19). The location was the OR (121), ED (82), other (1). Presence or absence of IM was documented in 198 of 204 charts: Twenty-four IMs (12%) occurred--14 multiple attempts, seven aspirations, three esophageal intubations. Frequency of IM was not statistically related to PI location (Fisher's exact test), AIS, or ISS. In 194 of 204 patients who survived at least 24 hours, there were 15 PUCs (8%): eight pneumonia, five persistent infiltrates, two severe atelectases. No deaths were related to IM or PUC. There was no statistical relationship between IM and PUC (Fisher's exact test). However, patients with PUCs had a significantly higher AIS-chest score (2.9 +/- 1.7 vs. 0.9 +/- 1.5) (p < 0.0005, Student's t test) and ISS (27.3 +/- 9.6 vs. 14.5 +/- 10.8) (p < 0.0005, Student's t test). In our hands, PI is associated with low morbidity, no mortality, and can be safely used to facilitate injury management or to control combative behavior.
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PMID:Urgent paralysis and intubation of trauma patients: is it safe? 845 64


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