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Traumatic brain injuries: predictive usefulness of CT.
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1992
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryBrain LesionLesions SizeNeuro-oncologyStrokeIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyNeuropathologyRadiologyHealth SciencesBrain Injury MedicineMedical ImagingNeuroimagingCerebral Blood FlowTraumatic Brain InjuriesDiagnostic NeuroradiologyConcussionComputed TomographicMedicineEmergency Medicine
The computed tomographic (CT) scans from 72 patients with traumatic brain injury were reviewed to determined whether a specific type, location, or size of lesion correlated with changes in neurologic function (assessed with the Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS]), patient outcome (assessed with the Glasgow Outcome Scale [GOS]), or catecholamine levels. The lesions were classified as focal or diffuse. GOS changed as a function of lesions size (P = .00004) in the 48 patients with focal hemorrhages, regardless of whether the lesions were intra- or extraaxial, and in the 19 patients with normal CT scans. Patients with lesions larger than 4,100 mm3 had a twofold greater risk of a poor outcome than patients with smaller lesions (100% vs 50%). Patients with normal CT scans were significantly more likely to have mild neurological dysfunction or none than patients with abnormal CT scans (P = .03), but lesion location, skull fracture, and pineal shift were not significant predictors of GCS or GOS scores. A positive relationship existed between lesion size and both plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine levels (P less than .02); a significant relationship existed between lesion size and GCS score (P = .02).