Abstract

IntroductionIn 2003, the Glasgow 7 Quality Guarantee Program was put into effect in Argentina with the objective of standardizing the donation and transplant process throughout the country, establishing the observation and registration of all neurocritical patients with a score on the Glasgow Coma Scale of 7 of 15 or less admitted to critical beds of selected establishments. Materials and MethodsThe following study is retrospective, observational, and cohort-based. It was developed in the Central Hospital of Mendoza, in the critical units, including guard, coronary, cardiovascular surgery recovery, and intensive care therapy.The inclusion criteria were admission to the institution with a score on the Glasgow Coma Scale of 7 or less with a structural cause of coma. Data collection was carried out in the national online database SINTRA. ResultsFrom January 1, 2008, to December 31, 2018, 1757 patients were enrolled at the Central Hospital of Mendoza, Argentina with Glasgow scores of 7 or less. The most frequent cause of coma was brain trauma (934 patients; 53%), followed by stroke (614 patients; 35%). Of those who scored 3 of 15 in the GCS upon admission, 65% progressed to brain death, whereas 72% of those who scored 7 were discharged. Of all these patients, 270 became donors, accounting for 43% of all brain deaths, whereas 187 had refused to become organ donors (30.6%). Of the total real donors, 55% were multiorganic (150 donors).

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