A pediatric specific shock index in combination with GMS identifies children with life threatening or severe traumatic brain injury
Author:
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Medicine,Surgery,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Link
http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s00383-015-3789-6.pdf
Reference17 articles.
1. Schneier AJ, Schields BJ, Hostetler SG, Xiang H, Smith GA (2006) Incidence of pediatric traumatic brain injury and associated hospital resource utilization in the United States. Pediatrics 118:483–492
2. Brain Trauma Foundation (2007) Guidelines for prehospital management of traumatic brain injury. Brain Trauma Foundation, New York
3. Atabaki SM (2006) Prehospital evaluation and management of traumatic brain injury in children. Clin Pediatr Emerg Med 7:94–104
4. Kornbluth J, Bhardwaj A (2011) Evaluation of coma: a critical appraisal of popular scoring systems. Neurocrit Care 14(1):134–143
5. Bruijns SR, Guly HR, Bouamra O, Lecky F, Lee WA (2013) The value of traditional vital signs, shock index, and age-based markers in predicting trauma mortality. J Trauma Acute Care Surg 74:1432–1437
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2. Shock index and shock index, pediatric age-adjusted as predictors of mortality in pediatric patients with trauma: A systematic review and meta-analysis;PLOS ONE;2024-07-18
3. Validation of motor component of Glasgow coma scale in lieu of total Glasgow coma scale as a pediatric trauma field triage tool;The American Journal of Emergency Medicine;2024-07
4. Predicting morbidity and mortality in Australian paediatric trauma with the Paediatric Age-Adjusted Shock Index and Glasgow Coma Scale;Injury;2022-04
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