Abstract

Limited computed tomography (CT) availability in low- and middle-income countries frequently impedes life-saving neurosurgical decompression for traumatic brain injury. A reliable, accessible, cost-effective solution is necessary to detect and localize bleeds. We report the largest study to date using a near-infrared device (NIRD) to detect traumatic intracranial bleeds. Patients with confirmed or suspected head trauma who received a head CT scan were included. Within 30 min of the initial head CT scan, a blinded examiner scanned each patient's cranium with a NIRD, interrogating bilaterally the frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital quadrants Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and precision were investigated. We recruited 500 consecutive patients; 104 patients had intracranial bleeding. For all patients with CT-proven bleeds, irrespective of size, initial NIRD scans localized the bleed to the appropriate quadrant with a sensitivity of 86% and specificity of 96% compared with CT. For extra-axial bleeds >3.5mL, sensitivity and specificity were 94% and 96%, respectively. For longitudinal serial rescans with the NIRD, sensitivity was 89% (< 4 days from injury: sensitivity: 99%), and specificity was 96%. For all patients who required craniectomy or craniotomy, the device demonstrated 100% sensitivity. NIRD is highly sensitive, specific, and reproducible over time in diagnosing intracranial bleeds. NIRD may inform neurosurgical decision making in settings where CT scanning is unavailable or impractical.

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