Abstract

Introduction: Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among young adults. The clinical outcome may also be difficult to predict. We aim to identify the factors predictive of favorable and unfavorable clinical outcomes for youthful patients with severe TBI who have the option of surgical craniotomy or surgical craniectomy.Methods: A retrospective review at a single Level II trauma center was conducted, identifying patients aged 18 to 30 years with isolated severe TBI with a mass-occupying lesion requiring emergent (< 6 hours from time of arrival) surgical decompression. Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score on arrival, type of surgery performed, mechanism of injury, length of hospital stay, Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS), mortality, and radiographic findings were recorded. A favorable outcome was a GOS of four or five at 30 days post operation, while an unfavorable outcome was GOS of 1 to 3.Results: Fifty patients were included in the final analysis. Closed head injuries (skull and dura intact), effacement of basal cisterns, disproportional midline shift (MLS), and GCS 3-5 on arrival all correlated with statistically significant higher rate of mortality and poor 30-day functional outcome. All mortalities (6/50 patients) were positive for each of these findings.Conclusions: Closed head injuries, the presenting GCS 3-5, the presence of MLS disproportional to the space occupying lesion (SOL), and effacement of basal cisterns on the initial computed tomography of the head all correlated with unfavorable 30-day outcome. Future prospective studies investigating a larger cohort may provide further insight into patients suffering from severe TBI.

Highlights

  • Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among young adults

  • We aim to identify the factors predictive of favorable and unfavorable clinical outcomes for youthful patients with severe TBI who have the option of surgical craniotomy or surgical craniectomy

  • Closed head injuries, the presenting Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) 3-5, the presence of midline shift (MLS) disproportional to the space occupying lesion (SOL), and effacement of basal cisterns on the initial computed tomography of the head all correlated with unfavorable 30-day outcome

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Summary

Introduction

Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among young adults. We aim to identify the factors predictive of favorable and unfavorable clinical outcomes for youthful patients with severe TBI who have the option of surgical craniotomy or surgical craniectomy. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a life-changing event that affects the patients, families, and the community at large. Following the primary traumatic insult, these severe TBI patients require aggressive medical and often surgical treatment to prevent secondary brain injury [4,5,6]. Previous studies focus on the influence of early decompressive craniectomies on outcomes in the setting of severe TBI with refractory intracranial hypertension [7, 15]. Many studies have found correlations pertaining to favorable or unfavorable outcomes, this remains a debated topic

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