Abstract

Purpose: To determine the neurological clinical signs predicting poor outcome in patients with coma of hypoxic/ anoxic origin through a systematic review and critical appraisal of the literature. Data sources: A structured search was performed using MEDLINE; search terms were 'prognosis' and 'coma'. Study selection: Articles published since 1980 were selected if they studied an adult population, had a sample size greater than 50 patients, focused on bedside clinical signs, and addressed long-term recovery and functional status. Data extraction: We reviewed all selected articles and abstracted pertinent information. Results: The overall outcome in hypoxic/anoxic coma is quite poor, with 65% of patients dying within two weeks and 10% surviving to one year. In particular, the absence of pupillary light reflexes, corneal reflexes or motor response to pain, at three days post-injury, can predict poor outcome with apparent 100% accuracy. Conclusions: The absence of any of three simple clinical signs correlates strongly with a poor neurological outcome. These signs can aid the intensivist in prognosticating, although certain methodological limitations of the studies limit inferences that can be drawn.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call